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Models and Mirrors: Towards an Anthropology of Public Events PDF

379 Pages·1998·24.39 MB·English
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Models and Mirrors Models and Mirrors: towards an anthropology of public events Don Handelman with a new preface by the author ~ Berghahn Books NEW YORK • OXFORD First published in 1990 by Cambridge University Press Published in 1998 by Berghahn Books Editorial offices: 55 John Street, 3rd floor, New York, NY 10038, USA 3, NewT ee Place, Magdalen Road, Oxford, OX 4 IRE, UK ©1990, 1998 Don Handelman All rights reserved. No patt of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the written permission of Berghahn Books. Library ofC ongress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Handelman, Don. Models and mirrors : towatds an anthropology of public events I by Don Handelman ; with a new preface by the author. p. em. Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index. ISBN 1-57181-165-6 (alk. paper) 1. Festivals. 2. Holidays. 3. Play. 4. Symbolism. I. Title. GT3930.H34 1998 394.2--dc21 98-30855 CIP British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Printed in the United States on acid-free paper For Lea and Ronit, my magic mirrors Contents List off igures page ix Preface to second edition: theorizing through models and mirrors X Comparison XI Ritualization and the symbolic type XVll Modelling and the problem of representation XXI Bureaucratic logic and the event-that-presents XXIX Notes xliii Bibliography I Acknowledgements !iii 1 Introduction 1 Premises and prepossessions 3 Why study public events? 9 Some basic features of public events 10 The positioning of performance 17 Proto-events 20 2 Models and mirrors 22 Events that model the lived-in world 23 Events that present the lived-in world 41 Events that re-present the lived-in world 49 Qualifications 58 3 Precariousness in play 63 Predicaments in play: the laughter of the Ik 72 Events and societies 76 2 Proto-events 83 Intersections 85 4 The donkey game 86 Play in the workshop 89 The donkey game - a tell-tail sign 93 Hanging tails on the angels 95 The sign of the tail 97 Intersections 102 5 Banana time 104 'Times' and 'themes' in the workplace 105 The integration of 'times' and 'themes' 107 3 Public events 113 Intersections 115 vii Contmts 6 The Palio of Siena 116 Comune, city, contrade 117 The Madonna 120 The contrada and the horse 122 The sequence of occasions in the festival model: frames of integration and opposition 126 The parade and the race 129 Alternative views 132 Intersections 136 7 Christmas mumming in Newfoundland 138 Interior and exterior attributes of person and community 139 The mumming complex in outport Newfoundland 145 Time, space, and control in mumming 148 Inside-out, outside-in: inversion and congruency in mumming 152 Convergence and divergence, concealment Mid revelation 15 5 Intersections 160 8 Holiday celebrations in Israeli kindergartens (Co-author, Lea Shamgar-Handelman} 162 Kindergarten and celebration in Israel 16 5 Kindergarten celebrations 168 Conclusions 187 Intersections 190 9 State ceremonies of Israel - Remembrance Day and Independence Day (Co-author, Elihu Katz} 191 The unit of comparison: sirens and fireworks 192 The dating of days, the shaping of space: aspects of Zionist cosmologic 194 Opening Remembrance Day: closing ranks and the struggle for renewal 202 Opening Independence Day: the glories of pluralism 212 National cosmology and the encoding of time 223 Intersections 234 10 Symbolic types - clowns 236 'In process': the clown at a Pakistani wedding 238 The clown as a symbolic type 240 The clown type and the boundary 245 Attributes of Pueblo Indian clowns 248 Hopi down and kachina: opposition and reconciliation 251 Anti-structure and process 255 The Dance of Man: down, boundary, process, and anti-structure 256 Conclusion 263 Epilogue: towards media events 266 Notes 270 Bibliography 30 1 Index 323 viii Figures 1 Self-regulation in Chisungu 35 2 Further feedback in Chisungu 36 3 Systemic design in Chisungu 38 4 Relationships among types of public events 61 5 Levels in the Palio model: hierarchy and fragmentation 126 6 The Palio model: transformations through parade and race 130 7 The opening ceremony of Remembrance Day, spatial layout 203 8 The opening ceremony of Independence Day, spatial layout 213 ix Preface to second edition: theorizing through models and mirrors I intended Models and Mirrors to be a book of ideas on what is (still so loosely and at times lightly) called 'ritual' in anthropology and cognate disciplines, and not a compendium of truth, or, for that matter, even of knowledge on the subject.' How phenomena that may be called 'rituals' exist in (and through) social worlds is of extreme importance. 'Rituals' are constituted through practice. So, for example, there was not and is not anything that can be called 'religion' without its practice, and this practice is often called 'ritual'. If religion is not practiced, it dies. One can argue that, to a considerable extent, 'ritual' actively constitutes (because it generates in and through practice) what is understood as 'religion'. So, too, more broadly (and now without any reference to reli gion), 'rituals' intentionally organize and orientate us to our horizons of being-in-the-world. Through the different meta-logics that organize the prac tice of 'rituals', we are enabled to change and/or to stultify, in relation to the possibilities that these horizons offer and withhold. Practice (the embodiment of the human being in action, moving towards, perceiving, and reconstituting horizons-of-being) is the condition of being human. Practice is the normal condition of curiosity about oneself in relation to the world. Practice makes us social beings, and curiosity is integral to this. Stemming from my own curiosity, the ideas of this volume are intention ally provisional and uncertain, and therefore playful (in the sense of play dis cussed in chapters 3, 4, and 5 - good to think with and to take in your own directions, together with, or instead of, in mine). The modes of thinking in the volume-modes of perception, analysis, and the making of connections are much more important than the conclusions reached. But I cannot spell out these ways of thinking without subverting the effects that the book may have on you. So, too, you can only know whether these ways of thinking res onate within you by reading the volume. (In this respect the volume is mod ular-it can be read as a coherent piece, but each chapter also stands by itself and can be read as such). The consequences of intentionally explicating all information and thereby making it available to consciousness, were set out close to three decades ago X Preface by Gregory Bateson in his Steps to an Ecology ofM ind (1972). The informa tion we hold consciously tends to be rationalized and made efficient in terms of relationships between ends and means: we thereby lose powerful, poetic qualities in this information. We become more single-minded in our hearing, reading, and feeling, losing the meta-possibilities that talk, text, and emotion may otherwise open to us. Therefore I tried to write this book on two levels. One should engage you directly, argumentatively, analytically. The other is more of ... a wondering (and wandering) but critical attitude ... towards the 'ritual' practices that people put together in order to act on the lived-in world by being in the world. This second level is, in the main, not conveyed directly - before we become conscious of certain kinds of information, these should sediment within us. Then the mind particles of information drift to where we dwell within ourselves, without being rationalized and reif1ed along the way. So I am especially pleased that this book is again available, this time in a paperback edition, a more compact (and friendly) constellation of particles. Comparison I also intended Models and Mirrors to take some first steps towards modes of comparison within this fuzzy zone that is called 'ritual'-a zone defined much more common-sensically than analytically in anthropology, as if we know what ritual is, and is about. (Catherine Bell [1992] has some trenchant com ments on this in arguing that the domain of 'ritual' has come into existence through the theoretical constructions ofWestern scholars). I am choosing my words carefully here, given various claims that comparative studies of ritual are prevalent in anthropology (and in the study of religions). I do not think that comparative studies of 'ritual'-especially studies of ritual practice-are preva lent in any discipline. 2 (Note that even though, from here on, I largely drop the quotation marks from the word, ritual, I continue to question the value and validity of the term). My own focus of comparison is on the logics of organization, of design, through which public events are put together. This concentrates attention on the logics of the practice of these events. In meta-terms, my concern is with the practice of practice. (I prefer the concept, 'public event', to that of 'ritual', for reasons given in chapter 1; and for those very reasons I am open to other, alter native terms as well). By 'logic,' I refer to the logics of phenomena, but not to the (philosophical, mathematical) logic of logic. The logics of phenomena refer here to the principled ways in which certain social occasions are intentionally ordered and disordered as practice (and practiced as ordering and disordering). A public event is activated, first and foremost, by the practice of the logic(s) of its organizational design. This idea does not tumble from some XI

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Ritual is one of the most discussed cultural practices, yet its treatment in anthropological terms has been seriously limited, characterized by a host of narrow conceptual distinctions. One major reason for this situation has been the prevalence of positivist anthropologies that have viewed and summ
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