Erik Mueggler
- Published in print:
- 2017
- Published Online:
- May 2018
- ISBN:
- 9780226483382
- eISBN:
- 9780226483412
- Item type:
- book
- Publisher:
- University of Chicago Press
- DOI:
- 10.7208/chicago/9780226483412.001.0001
- Subject:
- Anthropology, Asian Cultural Anthropology
Death has become the central salient topic in many parts of rural China. Transformations in economic life, social structure, political ideology, and spiritual aspirations have occurred at dizzying ...
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Death has become the central salient topic in many parts of rural China. Transformations in economic life, social structure, political ideology, and spiritual aspirations have occurred at dizzying speed. The socialist rituals that once gave people narrative structures to comprehend historical change have disappeared. Elderly people have lived through repeated radical social transformations from the socialist revolution forward: their deaths are now the sole site where these events can be reprised and evaluated. These deaths are opportunities to reassess how individual lives articulate with history, what social persons are, and what they might become. Practices of death are at the center of relations with a population that socialism disregarded: immaterial animate beings like ancestors, ghosts, and spirits. Death frames historical time with questions of embodiment and disembodiment: of the materialization of immaterial beings in bodies, effigies, and stones, and their dematerialization through fire, consumption, or corruption. This book investigates death in a mountain community in Yunnan Province, where Lòlop’ò people, officially Yi, speak a Tibeto-Burman language called Lòloŋo and are heir to an extraordinary range of resources for working on the dead: techniques to give the dead material form; exchanges to give substance to relations among the living and with the dead; laments and ritual chants used to communicate with the dead. Ultimately the aim of the book is to understand the questions Lòlop’ò ask and answer about these mysterious others at the center of their social world.Less
Death has become the central salient topic in many parts of rural China. Transformations in economic life, social structure, political ideology, and spiritual aspirations have occurred at dizzying speed. The socialist rituals that once gave people narrative structures to comprehend historical change have disappeared. Elderly people have lived through repeated radical social transformations from the socialist revolution forward: their deaths are now the sole site where these events can be reprised and evaluated. These deaths are opportunities to reassess how individual lives articulate with history, what social persons are, and what they might become. Practices of death are at the center of relations with a population that socialism disregarded: immaterial animate beings like ancestors, ghosts, and spirits. Death frames historical time with questions of embodiment and disembodiment: of the materialization of immaterial beings in bodies, effigies, and stones, and their dematerialization through fire, consumption, or corruption. This book investigates death in a mountain community in Yunnan Province, where Lòlop’ò people, officially Yi, speak a Tibeto-Burman language called Lòloŋo and are heir to an extraordinary range of resources for working on the dead: techniques to give the dead material form; exchanges to give substance to relations among the living and with the dead; laments and ritual chants used to communicate with the dead. Ultimately the aim of the book is to understand the questions Lòlop’ò ask and answer about these mysterious others at the center of their social world.