ABSTRACT

Ritual Communication examines how people create and express meaning through verbal and non-verbal ritual. Ritual communication extends beyond collective religious expression. It is an intrinsic part of everyday interactions, ceremonies, theatrical performances, shamanic chants, political demonstrations and rites of passage. Despite being largely formulaic and repetitive, ritual communication is a highly participative and self-oriented process. The ritual is shaped by time, space and the individual body as well as by language ideologies, local aesthetics, contexts of use, and relations among participants. Ritual Communication draws on a wide range of contemporary cultures - from Africa, America, Asia, and the Pacific - to present a rich and diverse study for students and scholars of anthropology, sociology and sociolinguistics.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

chapter one|29 pages

Little Rituals

chapter four|23 pages

Like a Crab Teaching Its Young to Walk Straight"

Proverbiality, Semantics, and Indexicality in English and Malay

chapter five|25 pages

Access Rituals in West African Communities

An Ethnopragmatic Perspective

chapter six|18 pages

Ritual and the Circulation of Experience

Negotiating Community in the Twentieth-Century Amazon

chapter seven|32 pages

Communicative Resonance across Settings

Marriage Arrangement, Initiation, an Political Meetings in Kenya

chapter eight|19 pages

Ritualized Performance as Total Social Facts

The House of Multiple Spirits in Tokelau

chapter nine|19 pages

Unjuk Rasa ("Expression of Feeling") in Sumba

Bloody Thursday in Its Cultural and Historical Context

chapter twelve|24 pages

"While I Sing I Am Sitting in a Real Airplane"

Innovative Contents in Shuar and Achuar Ritual Communication

chapter thirteen|24 pages

Interior Dialogues

The Co-Voicing of Ritual in Solitude