
Journal de la Société des Océanistes 124 | Année 2007-1 Hertz Revisité (1907-2007) Massim mortuary rituals revisited John Liep Electronic version URL: http://journals.openedition.org/jso/802 DOI: 10.4000/jso.802 ISSN: 1760-7256 Publisher Société des océanistes Printed version Date of publication: 1 June 2007 Number of pages: 97-103 ISBN: 978-2-85430-010-9 ISSN: 0300-953x Electronic reference John Liep, « Massim mortuary rituals revisited », Journal de la Société des Océanistes [Online], 124 | Année 2007-1, Online since 01 June 2010, connection on 20 April 2019. URL : http:// journals.openedition.org/jso/802 ; DOI : 10.4000/jso.802 © Tous droits réservés Massim mortuary rituals revisited par John LIEP* RÉSUMÉ ABSTRACT Alors que la région est célèbre pour la kula, les rites et While this region is famous for the kula, mortuary échanges funéraires sont en fait la principale dimension rituals and exchanges are in fact the prime cultural culturelle des Massim ¢ l’archipel juste à l’est de la focus of the Massim ¢ the archipelagos just east of New Nouvelle-Guinée. Frederick Damon note que l’exhuma- Guinea. Frederick Damon notes that exhumation and tion et l’enterrement secondaire, le thème central chez secondary burial, the theme central to Robert Hertz, Robert Hertz, faisaient partie des rites mortuaires des were part of Massim mortuary rites, but were prohibited Massim, mais furent interdits par le gouvernement colo- by the colonial government and Christian missions and nial et par les missions chrétiennes, et ont disparu depuis have long disappeared. Yet mortuary feasting remains longtemps. Les festivités mortuaires demeurent néan- vital in Massim societies. My article examines what moins essentielles dans les sociétés des Massim. Mon other aspects of mortuary rituals still make them a main article étudie les autres aspects des rites mortuaires qui concern in the region; and discusses mortuary exchanges continuent d’en faire une préoccupation d’importance of food, indigenous valuables and, increasingly, commo- dans la région ; et j’examine les échanges mortuaires de dities and money. I will emphasize that mortuary nourriture, d’objets de valeur indigènes et, de plus en exchanges are part of cycles of marriage alliances that plus, de marchandises et d’argent. J’insiste sur le fait que span at least three generations and are moments of les échanges mortuaires font partie de cycles d’alliances showdown in the practice of forming social relations matrimoniales qui s’étendent sur trois générations au and the internal political economy of local societies. moins et sont des moments de confrontation dans les Therefore, they remain so important in the area. pratiques de constitution de relations sociales et dans l’économie politique des sociétés locales. Ils demeurent donc importants dans ce secteur. K: Massim, mortuary feasting, exchange M- : Massim, festivités mortuaires, échange I had the good fortune to participate in the well studied anthropological regions in the two Kula conferences around 1980 which, I world. believe, made some contribution to the ethno- I have taken this opportunity to return to graphic fame of the Massim. From the time of Massim mortuary rituals. The anthology Death Seligman and Malinowski this relatively small rituals and life in the societies of the Kula Ring subregion has yielded formidable material for (Damon and Wagner, 1989) that resulted from anthropological discussion and has in the second the Second Kula conference’s session on death part of the last century drawn quite a number rituals contained a number of informative eth- of students so that it is now one of the most nographies of this topic in various Massim * University of Copenhagen, [email protected] Journal de la Société des Océanistes 124, année 2007-1 90 SOCIÉTÉ DES OCÉANISTES societies. It did not, however, constitute a published about ‘mortuary practices in their conclusive exploration of Massim mortuary barest outline only. A complete account of them rites. This was in part due to the absence of would easily fill a volume of the present size’ [the chapters by participants who, before and after volume of The sexual life of savages](ibid. : 149). the conference, contributed some of the most What he did describe conformed to the theme of innovating analyses of this domain (Weiner, Robert Hertz’s essay on Death (1960 [1907]). Munn and Battaglia). Neither does my article This was the sequence of rites from death and here pretend to present some definitive explana- exhumation to secondary burial and briefly to tion of the Massim mortuary complex. It is only the end of the cycle of mortuary feasts. Like a modest attempt to outline what I find are Hertz, Malinowski was concerned with the transformation of the social individual after some important aspects of it. I have drawn upon death and its repercussions on the living. Mali- the Death rituals volume, but also on earlier nowski described what to him was the bizarre and subsequent work on the theme from the customs of laying all the onerous and gruesome region. obligations of mourning not on the deceased’s My perspective is in some way that of an ‘real’ matrilineal relatives, but on the spouse and insider-outsider. My fieldwork experience is the affines (including, for a man, also his chil- ff from Rossel Island, the far-o easternmost dren). He noted, as did Hertz, a correspondence island in the region, marked off from the rest by between the decaying state of the corpse and the the Non-Austronesian language of its popula- ‘social death’ of the mourners, set apart from the tion1. However, Rossel shares matrilineal des- living by enervating taboos, as well as their cent with most of the Massim and other features ‘rebirth’ to normal life at the ceremonial lifting point to considerable Austronesian cultural of the taboos. Malinowski only departed from influence. The mortuary ritual on Rossel is much Hertz’s interpretation when he asserted that all downsized compared to that of the remainder of the mortuary rites proceeded without conse- the Massim. There is now only a single mortuary quence for the deceased’s spirit. It was transpor- feast shortly after the funeral, cantering on ted into the land of the dead shortly after death exchanges between the ‘sides’ of the deceased, and living happily there; unconcerned with the the deceased’s spouse and the deceased’s father. prolonged mortuary tasks of the living. Monta- Here is mortuary ritual cut down to the bare gue argues that Malinowski was mistaken here. bones, so to speak. The whole collection of food The spirit is well able from the nether world distributions so characteristic of the Massim is (Tuma) to appreciate the rites honouring him or absent. In some way this was a piece of luck. her, she says (Montague, 1989: 28). Presented with a simplified model of the ‘ele- Malinowski probably gave up writing an mentary structures’ of mortuary exchanges, and exhaustive analysis of Trobriand mortuary rites undisturbed by the bewildering overlay of innu- because he was unable to create a theoretical merable other exchanges and rites, I was from scheme that could account for them. This was early on impressed with the transgenerational due to his lack of interest in kinship analysis and aspect of mortuary rituals. This has made me a weak sense of social structure. His main invol- keen to distinguish it in the much more complex vement was with the individual and with psycho- material from other Massim societies. I cannot logical problems. He therefore delved into the pretend to master this extensive material in aspects which concerned his own personality the depth, but have attempted to draw out some most, the fear of death and the burden of berea- more general patterns and illustrate them with vement, and how they were played out in the simplified case material. I hope this may be strange orchestration of a matrilineal culture. In helpful in further comparative work on mor- a way, also Hertz’s discussion in his essay centred tuary rites in other regions. on the individual. Hertz was at pains to empha- size that death was a ‘social fact’ and the indivi- Fear and loathing in the Trobriands: Malinowski dual a ‘social person’. ‘Society’ both determined on death conceptions of the person and the soul, but also the state of the living during the liminal period ‘The whole mortuary ritual is’, Malinowski of transition after death. But his Durkheimian wrote, ‘perhaps the most difficult and bewilde- conception of ‘society’ was very abstract and ring aspect of Trobriand culture for the investi- unconcerned with the differentiation and rela- gating sociologist’ (1929: 148). In fact he tionships of its parts. 1. During a short visit to the Trobriands in 1980 I had the opportunity of attending a women’s sagali at the village of Sinaketa, but I did not attempt to record it. MASSIM MORTUARY RITUALS REVISITED 91 Weiner’s discovery of the function of Trobriand virtually always the result of somebody’s sor- mortuary rites cery. It does not only cause sorrow but also fear and rage. It takes time to reconcile the survivors. Annette Weiner must have the full credit of a Mourning duties are hard and protracted, they number of significant advancements in the are remunerated by prestations of wealth, as is understanding of Trobriand mortuary rites that the care the deceased took for other people, and contributed greatly to further research on these they for him or her. In a long sequence of mor- rites in the region (Weiner, 1976; 1978; 1980). tuary exchanges dragging out for years relations First, she showed that social relationships are among the living are repaired. This prolonged produced through exchanges. These are not tit- negotiation about social relations cannot pro- for-tat reciprocity but long term projects where ceed just verbally.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages9 Page
-
File Size-