Living Without the Dead: Loss and Redemption in a Jungle Cosmos

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University of Chicago Press, 19 окт. 2017 г. - Всего страниц: 380
Just one generation ago, the Sora tribe in India lived in a world populated by the spirits of their dead, who spoke to them through shamans in trance. Every day, they negotiated their wellbeing in heated arguments or in quiet reflections on their feelings of love, anger, and guilt.

Today, young Sora are rejecting the worldview of their ancestors and switching their allegiance to warring sects of fundamentalist Christianity or Hinduism. Communion with ancestors is banned as sacred sites are demolished, female shamans are replaced by male priests, and debate with the dead gives way to prayer to gods. For some, this shift means liberation from jungle spirits through literacy, employment, and democratic politics; others despair for fear of being forgotten after death.

How can a society abandon one understanding of reality so suddenly and see the world in a totally different way? Over forty years, anthropologist Piers Vitebsky has shared the lives of shamans, pastors, ancestors, gods, policemen, missionaries, and alphabet worshippers, seeking explanations from social theory, psychoanalysis, and theology. Living without the Dead lays bare today’s crisis of indigenous religions and shows how historical reform can bring new fulfillments—but also new torments and uncertainties.

Vitebsky explores the loss of the Sora tradition as one for greater humanity: just as we have been losing our wildernesses, so we have been losing a diverse range of cultural and spiritual possibilities, tribe by tribe. From the award-winning author of The Reindeer People, this is a heartbreaking story of cultural change and the extinction of an irreplaceable world, even while new religious forms come into being to take its place.
 

Содержание

Introduction
1
1 To the Underworld with Ononti the Shamaness
5
2 Leopard Power and Police Power the Jungle and the State
40
3 What the Living and the Dead Have to Say to Each Other
67
4 Memories without Rememberers
98
5 Young Monosi Changes His World Forever
124
6 Doloso Complicates the Future of His Mountaintop Village
149
7 Shocked by Baptists
166
Life after Sonums
236
Once and Future Hindus?
266
Government Kitsch and the Old Prophets New Message
294
12 Six Remarkable Women and Their Destinies
300
Spiritual Ecosystems and Loss of Theo diversity
323
Acknowledgments
337
Glossary of Ethnic Groups and Communities
341
References
343

8 Christians Die Mute
191
9 Redeemers Human and Divine
211

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Piers Vitebsky is Emeritus Head of Anthropology and Russian Northern Studies at the Scott Polar Research Institute in the University of Cambridge. He is the author of many books and has collaborated on television documentaries on BBC, Channel 4 and National Geographic. His book The Reindeer People won the Kiriyama Prize for nonfiction in 2006.

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