ABSTRACT

This volume consists of a number of carefully-selected readings that represent a wide range of discussions and theorizing about ritual. The selection encompasses definitional questions, issues of interpretation, meaning, and function, and a roster of ethnographic and analytical topics, covering classic themes such as ancestor worship and sacrifice, initiation, gender, healing, social change, and shamanic practices, as well as recent critical and reconstructive theorizing on embodiment, performance, and performativity. In their Introduction to the volume, the Editors provide an overall survey and critical consideration of topics, incorporating insights from their own long-term field research and reflections on the readings included. The Introduction and readings together provide a unique research tool for those interested in pursuing the study of ritual processes in depth, with the benefit of both historical and contemporary approaches.

part 2|1 pages

Further Theoretical Categories and Considerations

chapter 6|9 pages

The Problem and its Setting

chapter 7|20 pages

Taboo 1

chapter 9|19 pages

Liminality and Communitas

chapter 10|18 pages

Oracles Support Divine Justice

part 3|1 pages

Topical Arenas and Examples

chapter 18|9 pages

Ritual Communication and Linguistic Ideology

A Reading and Partial Reformulation of Rappaport’s Theory of Ritual 1

chapter 20|21 pages

The Magical Power of Words

chapter 21|23 pages

Puberty Rites, Women’S Naven, and Initiation

Women’s Rituals of Transition in Abelam and Iatmul Culture

chapter 23|17 pages

Silent Forms but Natural Symbols?

chapter 25|26 pages

Pietas in Ancestor Worship

The Henry Myers Lecture, 1960

chapter 28|23 pages

Blood, Fire, and Word

Luo, Christian, and Luo-Christian Sacrifice

chapter 31|14 pages

“Cattle Aren’t Killed for Nothing”

Christianity, Conversion, and the Enduring Importance of Prophe