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Unintelligibility and imaginative interpretation in a Petalangan healing ritual

  • Yoonhee Kang

    Linguistic and cultural anthropologist who has worked on Petalangan magic and ritual language (Indonesia). Her most recent article that examines the transformations in Petalangan verbal magic in the broader context of social change appears in Journal of Linguistic Anthropology.

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Published/Copyright: August 20, 2007
Text & Talk
From the journal Volume 27 Issue 4

Abstract

This article explores how ritual unintelligibility reconfigures participants' engagement, based on an analysis of two video clips of a belian performance, a shamanic healing ritual practiced among the Petalangan of Indonesia. These video clips show two phases of the ritual: the shaman's performance of a magic spell and a ritual song. The analysis reveals how a specific mode of unintelligibility in each scene of the ritual emerges through the mismatches among semantic, pragmatic, and metapragmatic levels of meaning. Furthermore, each scene's unintelligibility intersects with the locals' conventional genre expectations, the violation of which leads to a reconfiguration of the participants' structure. In the first scene, the spell's semantic unintelligibility does not exclude the audience from understanding its pragmatic meanings. The audience expects the spell to be an ‘act’, in which referential meanings are not important for understanding the intents and functions of the ritual act. However, in the second clip, the shaman's semantically transparent but pragmatically ambiguous ritual song engages the audience more in the ritual process. Since the audience expects the ritual song to be understandable ‘talk’ between a shaman and spirits, the violation of the genre expectation leads the audience to participate in the ritual in a creative way through their imaginations. Unlike many previous studies that have assumed ritual unintelligibility blocks nonspecialists' access to ritual meanings, this article demonstrates that the unintelligibility in this particular ritual may also encourage the audience's engagement by stimulating their imaginative interpretations of the meanings.


*Address for correspondence: Center for Folklore and Ethnography, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6304, USA

About the author

Yoonhee Kang

Linguistic and cultural anthropologist who has worked on Petalangan magic and ritual language (Indonesia). Her most recent article that examines the transformations in Petalangan verbal magic in the broader context of social change appears in Journal of Linguistic Anthropology.

Published Online: 2007-08-20
Published in Print: 2007-07-20

© Walter de Gruyter

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