Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T15:06:20.607Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Physicalising the spirit-dimension by song, dance and ‘fakery’ in indigenous mainland Riau, Indonesia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 September 2015

Abstract

The Orang Sakai of Mainland Riau, on the east coast of Sumatra, have an elaborate performing art genre through which they physicalise the unseen spirit-dimension in a shamanic ritual called dikei. Their shamanic ritual utilises songs, dance as well as comedy. This article elaborates on how songs and dance visualise the unseen beings and provides detailed examples of Sakai performances during which shamans ‘dance with’ or ‘move with’ the spirits. A second theme of the article is the question of the relationship between the meaning of ‘performance’ and fakery, and suggests that there are three types of performed fakery, two of which are accepted as valid and necessary performances which technically contribute to the performance of medicine and the physicalisation of spirit presence.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 The performance of healing, ed. Carol Laderman and Marina Roseman (London: Routledge, 1997); Sue Jennings, Theatre, ritual and transformation: The Senoi Temiars (London: Routledge, 1995).

2 See Edward Schieffelin, ‘Problematising performance in ritual’, in Ritual, performance, and media, ed. Felicia Hughes-Freeland (London: Routledge, 1996), pp. 194–207; Edward Schieffelin, ‘On failure and performance: Throwing the medium out of a séance’, in The performance of healing, pp. 59–90; Susana Rostas, ‘From ritualisation to performativity: The Concheros of Mexico’, in Ritual, performance, and media, pp. 85–103.

3 Richard Schechner and Willa Appel, By means of performance: Intercultural studies of theatre and ritual (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990).

4 Porath, Nathan, ‘Seeing sound: Consciousness and therapeutic acoustics in the inter-sensory shamanic epistemology of the Orang Sakai of Riau’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 14, 3 (2008): 647–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 Susanna Knauth Langer, Feeling and form: A theory of art development from philosophy in a new key (New York: Scribner's, 1953).

6 Jackson, Michael, ‘Knowledge of the body’, Man 18, 2 (1983): 327–45CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7 For accounts of other Orang Asli groups in Riau, see Tenas Effendy, ‘The Orang Petalangan of Riau and their forest environment’, in Tribal communities in the Malay world: Historical, cultural and social perspectives, ed. Geoffrey Benjamin and Cynthia Chou (Singapore: ISEAS; Leiden: IIAS, 2002), pp. 364–83; Effendy, Tenas, ‘Petalangan society and changes in Riau’, in Riau in transition, special issue, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 153, 4 (1997): 630–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ashley Turner, ‘Belian as a symbol of cosmic reunification’, in Metaphor: A musical dimension, ed. Jamie C. Kassler (Basel: Gordon and Breach [rev. ed.], 1994), pp. 121–46; Turner Ashley, ‘Cultural survival, identity and the performing arts of Kampar's suku Petalangan’, in Riau in transition: 648–67.

8 Max Moszkowski, Auf Neuen Wegen Durch Sumatra (Berlin: Reimar, 1909).

9 Nathan Porath, ‘Being human in a dualist and not-so-dualist world: Exploring Sakai concepts of self and personhood’, in Anthropology and science: Epistemologies in practice, ed. Jeannete Edwards, Penny Harvey and Peter Wade (Oxford: Berg, 2007); Nathan Porath, ‘Not to be aware anymore: Indigenous Sumatran concepts of consciousness’, Anthropology of Consciousness 24, 1 (2013): 7–31. Porath, ‘Seeing sound’.

10 Porath, Nathan, ‘Creating medicine on a swing: The effectiveness of mirroring, mimetic sensoriality and embodiment to facilitate childbirth among the Sakais of Riau (Sumatra)’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 17, 4 (2011): 811–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Porath, Nathan, ‘Freud among the Sakais: The father-archetype, the talking cure and the transference in an indigenous Sumatran shamanic healing complex’, Anthropos 108, 1 (2013): 117CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 The puat is a highly condensed and multivalent symbolic object in dikei as well as in Sakai knowledge about the self and the environment (cosmos). The different leaves of the puat represent the different species of tall trees (Sialang) in which bees nest. There are many types of puat as well as tiered three/seven/nine-branched puat. On one basic level the puat represents what in broader Indonesian discourse is called Kayu Alam (World Tree, Cosmic Tree).

12 For a detailed description of Sakai bark houses see Nathan Porath and Gerard Persoon, ‘Lean-tos, huts and houses: Forms of shelter among nomadic forest dwellers in Southeast Asia’, in Indonesian houses: Survey of vernacular architecture in western Indonesia, vol. 2, ed. Riemar Schefold, Peter Nas, Goudenz Domenig and Robert Wessing (Leiden: KITLV, 2008), pp. 279–308.

13 Sandbukt, Ovyind, ‘Kubu conceptions of reality’, Asian Folklore Studies 42 (1984): 8598CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

14 In an earlier period the Sultan of Siak would bestow on the batin headmen a deta bekampuh as a sign of office. These would be worn when meeting state officials. There may also have been an original association of the shaman's crown with Alexander the Great, who in classical Malay histories is Raja Iskandar Zul Kernain (King Alexander with the two horns), the great rajah of antiquity from whom the Malay sultans of Johor claimed descent.

15 In the past a yellow cloth was donned when performing for a raja.

16 Sandbukt, ‘Kubu conceptions of reality’.

17 James Kawada, ‘Human dimensions of sound’, in Redefining nature: Ecology, culture and domestication, ed. Roy Ellen and Katsuyoshi Fukui (London: Berg, 1996), pp. 39–60.

18 Alfred Gell, The art of anthropology: Essays and diagrams (London: Athlone, 1999).

19 See also Desjarlais, Robert, ‘Healing through images: The magical flight and healing geography of Nepali shamans’, Ethos 17, 3 (1989): 289302CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Roseman, Marina, ‘Singers of the landscape: Song history and property rights in the Malaysian rainforest’, American Anthropologist 100, 1 (1989): 106–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20 She is usually represented by the multivalent puat (puan), here representing ‘the maiden’ given as a gift to the raja spirit. The gift of the maiden theme is also found in Sakai legend, reflecting the power relationship between the Orang Batin and the hierarchical Malay world.

21 Another term is akuan.

22 Don Handelman, Models and mirrors: Towards an anthropology of public events (Oxford: Berghahn, 1998); Bruce Kapferer, A celebration of demons: Exorcism and the aesthetics of healing in Sri Lanka (Oxford: Berg; Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institute, 1991).

23 Keane, Webb, ‘The objects of evidence: Anthropological approaches to the production of knowledge’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 14 (2008): 110–27Google Scholar.

24 Jane Belo, Trance in Bali (New York: Columbia University Press, 1960); Kartomi, Margaret, ‘Music and trance in Java’, Ethnomusicology 17, 2 (1973): 163208CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25 Porath, ‘Not to be aware anymore’.

26 Foley, Kathy, ‘The dancer and the danced: Trance dance and theatrical performance in West Java’, Asian Theatre Journal 2, 1 (1985): 2849CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

27 Andrew Lang, The making of religion (London: Longmans, Green and Co, 1898).

28 Herbert Spencer, ‘The physiology of laughter’, in Herbert Spencer, Essays: Scientific, political and speculative (New York: D. Appleton, 1864).

29 For a fascinating account of the use of incongruity, superiority and descending incongruity within the play of therapeutic comedy, see Kapferer, Bruce, ‘Entertaining demons: Comedy, interaction and meaning in a Sinhalese healing ritual’, Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice 1 (1979): 108–52Google Scholar.