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This volume brings together case studies and surveys of recent research to address foundational questions regarding the scope, structuring, use, and consequences of ritual language. The chapters examine traditional inquiries and more recent research, and draw on data from a wide range of language groups and societies.
Sommario
- Part I. Ritual Language in History and Anthropology
- 1: David Tavárez: Language, ritual, and colonialism: A brief cultural history
- 2: David Tavárez: The anthropology of ritual language: Classic and contemporary approaches
- Part II. Rethinking Ritual Language in Method and Theory
- 3: Kristina Wirtz: The chronotopic and sonotopic work of ritual
- 4: Paul Christopher Johnson: The language of secrecy
- 5: Janet McIntosh: The ritual language of militarization
- 6: Timothy W. Knowlton: Language and ritual healing
- Part III. Ritual Language, Colonialism, and State Hegemony
- 7: Jennifer Scheper Hughes: Ritual language and sacred labor in Greater Mexico
- 8: Margaret Bender and Thomas N. Belt: Ritual speech and text in early Cherokee Christianity
- 9: Abdelmajid Hannoum: Colonial rule, modernity, and rituals of royal power in Morocco
- 10: Courtney Handman: Ritual, media, and the here-and-now of decolonization
- 11: Magnus Fiskesjö: Ritual language and forced confessions in China
- Part IV. Ritual Language, Cosmology, and Identity
- 12: Sergio Romero: Language, ritual, and political legitimation in colonial Guatemala
- 13: Paul Liffman: Indigenous territoriality and the mediation of space and scale in ritual language
- 14: Alexandre Surrallés: Affectivity and repetition in Amazonian ceremonial welcoming dialogues
- 15: Abelardo de la Cruz: Language, Nahua life-cycle rituals, and Indigenous identity
- 16: Bruce Mannheim: Places that talk--and listen: Southern Quechua
- Part V. Ritual Speech and the Arts of Sociability
- 17: Paul Manning: Drinking, talking, and ritual action
- 18: Sonia N. Das: Ritual language and police discretion
- 19: Nikolas Sweet: Ritual language in West Africa: Participation and performance
- 20: Sean O'Neill: Language, worldview, and rituals of daily social interaction
- Part VI. Ritual Language, Mediation, and Pluralism
- 21: Adam Harr: Scalar poetics in ritual language
- 22: Louis Römer: Rituals of mourning and the poetics of Papiamentu talk radio
- 23: Morgan Siewert: Ritualized learning and endangered languages
- 24: Nishaant Choksi: Embodied ritual performance and new writing systems
Info autore
David Tavárez is Professor of Anthropology at Vassar College. His work focuses on language and history; Indigenous intellectuals; and Native Christianities. A former Guggenheim Fellow and the co-editor of Anthropological Linguistics, he is author, co-author, or editor of five books, including the award-winning Rethinking Zapotec Time(Texas, 2022) and The Invisible War(Stanford, 2011), along with more than sixty articles and chapters.
Riassunto
This volume brings together case studies and surveys of recent research to address foundational questions regarding the scope, structuring, use, and consequences of ritual language. The chapters examine traditional inquiries and more recent research, and draw on data from a wide range of language groups and societies.