Description

Book Synopsis

Belian is an exceptionally lively tradition of shamanistic curing rituals performed by the Luangans, a politically marginalized population of Indonesian Borneo. This volume explores the significance of these rituals in practice and asks what belian rituals do – socially, politically, and existentially – for particular people in particular circumstances. Departing from the conception that rituals exist as ethereal, liminal or insulated traditional domains, this volume demonstrates the importance of understanding rituals as emergent within their specific historical and social settings. It offers an analysis of a number of concrete ritual performances, exemplifying a diversity of ritual genres, stylistic modalities and sensual ambiences, from low-key, habitual affairs to drawn-out, crowd-seizing community rituals and innovative, montage-like cultural experiments.



Trade Review

Ritual Retellings contributes to the rich ethnographic tradition of scholarship in Indonesia and Southeast Asia. The author situates the Luangan ethnographically, detailing comparisons with other peoples in Kalimantan as well as with peoples in Malaysia, the Phillipines, and elsewhere in Indonesia. For ethnographers and scholars of Southeast Asia, this book is an important addition to the literature.” • Medical Anthropology Quarterly

“This work is a significant contribution to anthropology and to South-east Asian studies on dispersed communities and on curing rituals. The textually-rich chapters offer topics of interest to other scholars working on social anxiety, material culture, musicology and public health.” • Asian Journal of Social Science

“…an elegantly written ethnography… I warmly recommend [it] to the student of oral traditions and heritage, especially to those who have an interest in ethnographical methodologies and collaborative approaches.” • Moussons: Recherche en sciences humaines sur l’Asie du Sud-Est

“Herrmans’ ethnographically rich analysis is based upon data that were collected during visits that spanned the course of decades…That Herrmans’ analysis of belian is as deeply immersed in anthropological theory as it is engaged with ethnographic literatures is a strength of this book…The volume is highly recommended for scholars of Southeast Asia, of ritual and religion, medical anthropologists, and social scientists with broad interests in indigenous identities and social change. It would also be useful reading in graduate courses on ritual and religion.” • Anthropological Forum

“Of particular value is Herrmans’s analysis of the subject matter from a multidimensional perspective by integrating various theoretical trends and concepts…The greatest strength of this volume is its captivating and vivid ethnographic description and meticulous documentation of situationally emerging ritual performances, entwined with the life stories of the particular people who were involved in them through which the ethnographic scene is brought ‘alive’ for the reader.” • The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology

“I consider this book to be a valuable contribution to Southeast Asian ethnography and to the study of ritual performance and healing. The author effectively explores the connections of her study to contemporary approaches to the study of ritual meaning and practice, and to the wider ethnographic literature. The book reads as an extended conversation with colleagues about ways to approach, present, and understand curing rituals.” • Jane Monnig Atkinson, Lewis & Clark College

“The author draws the reader into a discussion about myth and ritual as flexible, unpredictable and ongoing processes intertwined with everyday life. The main strengths of the book… are how the author lets the spirits come alive, acting as subjects, and the central place she gives to the exploration of spirit negotiations.” • Jörgen Hellman, University of Gothenburg



Table of Contents

List of Figures
Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter 1. Luangan Lives: The Order and Disorder of Improvisation and Practice
Chapter 2. Representing Unpredictability
Chapter 3. Making Tactile: Ganti Diri Figures and the Magic of Concreteness
Chapter 4. The Uncertainty of Spirit Negotiation
Chapter 5. So that Steam Rises: Ritual Bathing as Depersonalization
Chapter 6. It Comes Down to One Origin: Reenacting Mythology and the Human-Spirit Relationship in Ritual

Conclusion

Glossary
References
Index

Ritual Retellings: Luangan Healing Performances

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    A Hardback by Isabell Herrman

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      View other formats and editions of Ritual Retellings: Luangan Healing Performances by Isabell Herrman

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/03/2015
      ISBN13: 9781782385646, 978-1782385646
      ISBN10: 1782385649

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Belian is an exceptionally lively tradition of shamanistic curing rituals performed by the Luangans, a politically marginalized population of Indonesian Borneo. This volume explores the significance of these rituals in practice and asks what belian rituals do – socially, politically, and existentially – for particular people in particular circumstances. Departing from the conception that rituals exist as ethereal, liminal or insulated traditional domains, this volume demonstrates the importance of understanding rituals as emergent within their specific historical and social settings. It offers an analysis of a number of concrete ritual performances, exemplifying a diversity of ritual genres, stylistic modalities and sensual ambiences, from low-key, habitual affairs to drawn-out, crowd-seizing community rituals and innovative, montage-like cultural experiments.



      Trade Review

      Ritual Retellings contributes to the rich ethnographic tradition of scholarship in Indonesia and Southeast Asia. The author situates the Luangan ethnographically, detailing comparisons with other peoples in Kalimantan as well as with peoples in Malaysia, the Phillipines, and elsewhere in Indonesia. For ethnographers and scholars of Southeast Asia, this book is an important addition to the literature.” • Medical Anthropology Quarterly

      “This work is a significant contribution to anthropology and to South-east Asian studies on dispersed communities and on curing rituals. The textually-rich chapters offer topics of interest to other scholars working on social anxiety, material culture, musicology and public health.” • Asian Journal of Social Science

      “…an elegantly written ethnography… I warmly recommend [it] to the student of oral traditions and heritage, especially to those who have an interest in ethnographical methodologies and collaborative approaches.” • Moussons: Recherche en sciences humaines sur l’Asie du Sud-Est

      “Herrmans’ ethnographically rich analysis is based upon data that were collected during visits that spanned the course of decades…That Herrmans’ analysis of belian is as deeply immersed in anthropological theory as it is engaged with ethnographic literatures is a strength of this book…The volume is highly recommended for scholars of Southeast Asia, of ritual and religion, medical anthropologists, and social scientists with broad interests in indigenous identities and social change. It would also be useful reading in graduate courses on ritual and religion.” • Anthropological Forum

      “Of particular value is Herrmans’s analysis of the subject matter from a multidimensional perspective by integrating various theoretical trends and concepts…The greatest strength of this volume is its captivating and vivid ethnographic description and meticulous documentation of situationally emerging ritual performances, entwined with the life stories of the particular people who were involved in them through which the ethnographic scene is brought ‘alive’ for the reader.” • The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology

      “I consider this book to be a valuable contribution to Southeast Asian ethnography and to the study of ritual performance and healing. The author effectively explores the connections of her study to contemporary approaches to the study of ritual meaning and practice, and to the wider ethnographic literature. The book reads as an extended conversation with colleagues about ways to approach, present, and understand curing rituals.” • Jane Monnig Atkinson, Lewis & Clark College

      “The author draws the reader into a discussion about myth and ritual as flexible, unpredictable and ongoing processes intertwined with everyday life. The main strengths of the book… are how the author lets the spirits come alive, acting as subjects, and the central place she gives to the exploration of spirit negotiations.” • Jörgen Hellman, University of Gothenburg



      Table of Contents

      List of Figures
      Acknowledgments

      Introduction

      Chapter 1. Luangan Lives: The Order and Disorder of Improvisation and Practice
      Chapter 2. Representing Unpredictability
      Chapter 3. Making Tactile: Ganti Diri Figures and the Magic of Concreteness
      Chapter 4. The Uncertainty of Spirit Negotiation
      Chapter 5. So that Steam Rises: Ritual Bathing as Depersonalization
      Chapter 6. It Comes Down to One Origin: Reenacting Mythology and the Human-Spirit Relationship in Ritual

      Conclusion

      Glossary
      References
      Index

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