Foster Robert J., 1990, Nurture and force-feeding: mortuary feasting and the construction of collective individuals in a New Ireland society

Item

Full designation (Familyname Name, date, title)
Foster Robert J., 1990, Nurture and force-feeding: mortuary feasting and the construction of collective individuals in a New Ireland society
Creator
Robert J. Foster
Date
1990
Title
Nurture and force-feeding: mortuary feasting and the construction of collective individuals in a New Ireland society
Abstract
This article concerns the performative efficacy of mortuary feasting in constructing matrilineages as transcendent collective individuals. Melanesian mortuary symbolism commonly assimilates death and decay to forms of consumption epitomized by eating. In Tanga, giving food dialectically relates the guests and hosts of mortuary feasts as “eaters” and “noneaters,” or as consumers and agents impervious to consumption. Exchanges of cooked pigs and shell disks objectify this relative evaluation. I analyze the sequence of Tangan mortuary feasts as a process whereby agents detach attributes of “partible” persons and ideally complement each other in the project of creating matrilineal continuity. [mortuary symbolism and ritual, feasting, exchange, matriliny, Melanesia]
Alternative Title
_eprint: https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1525/ae.1990.17.3.02a00020
Language
en
doi
10/c7vb8m
pages
431-448
volume
17
Source
American Ethnologist
Wiley Online Library
issue
3
issn
1548-1425
short title
Nurture and force-feeding
Item sets
Documents