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Celebrations of Death: The Anthropology of Mortuary Ritual 2nd Revised edition [Mīkstie vāki]

(International Science and Technology Institute, Inc., Washington DC), (University of Virginia)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 258 pages, height x width x depth: 232x157x22 mm, weight: 461 g, 9 Halftones, unspecified; 9 Line drawings, unspecified
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Oct-1991
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0521423759
  • ISBN-13: 9780521423755
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 32,61 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 258 pages, height x width x depth: 232x157x22 mm, weight: 461 g, 9 Halftones, unspecified; 9 Line drawings, unspecified
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Oct-1991
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0521423759
  • ISBN-13: 9780521423755
This revised edition of a cross-cultural study of rituals surrounding death has become a standard text in anthropology, sociology, and religion. Part of its fascination and success is that in understanding other people's death rituals we are able to gain a better understanding of our own. Peter Metcalf and Richard Huntington refer to a wide variety of examples from different continents and epochs. They compare the great tombs of the Berawan of Borneo and the pyramids of Egypt, or the dramas of medieval French royal funerals and the burial alive of the Dinka "masters of the spear" in the Sudan, and other burials which at first sight seem to have little in common. Many of these cases are anthropological classics, and the authors use these examples partly in order to illustrate the many different ways in which anthropologists have tried to interpret these rites. A new introduction reviews theoretical developments in the anthropological study of death since the book first appeared in 1979.

Recenzijas

"...a model of clarity. It can be read by specialist and non-specialist alike..." Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion "...a readable and fascinating survey that on occasions borders on the brilliant." Choice

Papildus informācija

This revised edition of a cross-cultural study of rituals surrounding death has become a standard text in anthropology, sociology and religion.
Illustrations
ix(2)
Preface xi
INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND EDITION 1(23)
Ritual and emotion 2(3)
Ritual and the polity 5(1)
"Life" as a political resource 6(4)
The universal and the particular in symbolism 10(2)
Death rituals and exchange 12(2)
Reconstructing death rites 14(5)
Death and the longue duree 19(3)
Death and reflexivity 22(2)
1. PRELIMINARIES
24(19)
Death in life
24(1)
The "death awareness" movement
25(2)
Death ritual and nineteenth-century anthropology
27(1)
Durkheim and the sociology of religion
28(1)
Van Gennep's rites of passage
29(3)
Liminality
32(1)
Hertz's study of secondary burial
33(3)
Modern developments of Hertz's thesis
36(1)
The format of this book
37(6)
PART I. UNIVERSALS AND CULTURE 43(36)
2. EMOTIONAL REACTIONS TO DEATH
43(19)
Sentiments and society: Radcliffe-Brown's theory
44(4)
Durkheim and the aborigines
48(5)
"A passion of grief": Nyakyusa funerals
53(6)
Culture and sentiment
59(3)
3. SYMBOLIC ASSOCIATIONS OF DEATH
62(17)
Drumming: symbol of death, liminality, or divinity?
64(4)
Ritual actions and daily activities
68(3)
Liminality and the corpse
71(1)
Rotting, fermenting, dyeing, and distilling
72(2)
The universal and the particular
74(5)
PART II. DEATH AS TRANSITION 79(54)
4. THE LIVING AND THE DEAD: A RE-EXAMINATION OF HERTZ
79(29)
The three sides of Hertz's analysis
79(6)
An application: Berawan death rites
85(12)
Variations on a theme: Ma'anyan, Toradja, Balinese, Iban, and Mambai
97(11)
5. DEATH RITUALS AND LIFE VALUES: RITES OF PASSAGE RECONSIDERED
108(25)
Life themes in death
108(3)
Problems with the approaches of Hertz and van Gennep
111(2)
Bara life values: order and vitality
113(3)
The Bara funeral sequence: burial, gathering, reburial
116(6)
Symbolic generation of "vitality"
122(6)
Resolution: intercourse and rebirth
128(1)
Transition and life
129(4)
PART III. THE ROYAL CORPSE AND THE BODY POLITIC 133(58)
6. THE DEAD KING
133(29)
Royal funerals in the Indic states of Southeast Asia: Thailand and Bali
135(9)
Legitimization through death monuments: the Berawan
144(8)
Pyramid building and the Pharaonic state
152(10)
7. THE IMMORTAL KINGSHIP
162(29)
The divine kingship of the Shilluk of the Sudan
163(5)
Body politic and body natural
168(5)
Le roi est mort! Vive le roi!
173(6)
Regicide
179(2)
Dinka burial alive
181(10)
PART IV. SEEING OURSELVES ANEW 191(24)
8. AMERICAN DEATHWAYS
191(24)
Problems in the study of American deathways
193(1)
The first paradox: ritual uniformity and indeterminate ideology
193(3)
Critiques of the funeral industry
196(4)
Fear and guilt: the inadequacy of psychology
200(4)
Collective representations of death in America
204(2)
The second paradox: puppet death
206(3)
An indigenous American religion
209(6)
Bibliography 215(16)
Index 231