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9 - Creative possessions: spirit mediumship and millennial economy among Gebusi of Papua New Guinea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Bruce M. Knauft
Affiliation:
Emory University, Atlanta
Michael Lambek
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
Andrew Strathern
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh
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Summary

In recent years, notions of power and resistance have often informed anthropological understandings of spiritual experience and embodiment. The entranced individual can be viewed as pushing against inequities bequeathed by political domination, gender, race, or age. Providing a voice for the disempowered, the possessed persona can be considered the colonial subject crying out against colonialism, the woman resisting patriarchy, the youthful agent protesting gerontocracy, the heathen subverting Christianity or Islam, or the spiritual gift economy resisting the market. In various permutations, such views are common in works on spirit possession and millenarianism in Africa and Melanesia, including classic studies such as Lanternari's Religions of the Oppressed (1963), Worsley's The Trumpet Shall Sound (1968), and Lewis's Ecstatic Religion (1971). More recently, local expressions and idioms of spirituality have been seen to contradict and destabilize the assumptions upon which state or Western logics of control are founded. This point has been elaborated by Michael Taussig (1987, 1993), Anna Tsing (1993), Mary Steedly (1993), and Smadar Lavie (1990), among others. As Boddy (1994:419) notes in a recent review, “most would agree that possession cults are or have become historically sensitive modes of cultural resistance.”

Amid signal contributions, however, such portrayals easily partake of what Abu-Lughod (1990) calls the romance of resistance. And as Ortner (1995) has recently noted, there is a tendency for studies of resistance to be ethnographically thin rather than rich. Analogously, treatments of spiritual imagination and mimesis can be frustratingly vague at the same time that they can be suggestive and stimulating.

Type
Chapter
Information
Bodies and Persons
Comparative Perspectives from Africa and Melanesia
, pp. 197 - 209
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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