ABSTRACT

This book critically examines dominant ceremonial practices in Sri Lanka. It presents key ideas and symbolic systems that exist to this day, in similar shapes or in different guises. It looks at issues such as misfortunes caused by demons (yaksa dosa), an important ceremonial practice known as the puna-yāgaya, ideas pertaining to spirit possession, trance, and mediums. It also deals with classical Ayurvedic theories of disease, urban ceremonial practices such as cases of the apotheoses from demon to divinity, as well as multiple forms of Buddhist ceremonial practices that are part of the Sri Lankan consciousness and have found their way into public cultural performances in Sri Lanka.

 

As a comprehensive volume on ceremonial practices in Sri Lanka, this work will be useful for scholars and researchers in cultural studies, sociology, social-anthropology, and particularly those interested in myths and rituals in South Asia.

chapter 1|45 pages

The Sanni demons

Collective representations of disease in Sri Lanka 1

chapter 2|37 pages

On perjury

The ritual of the leopard pot 1

chapter 3|49 pages

The spirits of the dead

A psycho-cultural exegesis of a case study of an exorcism 1

chapter 4|22 pages

Sorcery and premeditated murder

The canalization of aggression 1

chapter 5|17 pages

From demon to god

The apotheosis of Hūniyan 1