The Emory Department of Anthropology presents: Songs for dead parents: materializing and dematerializing the dead in Southwest China Erik Mueggler Professor of Anthropology, University of Michigan This talk examines the ritualiza on of death in a “minority” community in mountainous Southwest China, where people are heir to an extraordinary range of resources for working on the dead, including abundant poe c language. The talk’s focus is the central ar fact of poe c heritage in this region, an eight‐hour‐long speech for the dead, abandoned in the 1950s. The speech, divided into 72 “songs”, is a massive construc on project, which builds a world for the dead. A er bringing sky, earth, and markets into being, these songs for dead parents alternate between two fates for the dead soul, connected to a 19th‐century transi on from crema on to burial. On the one hand, the soul hangs forever in the sky, swaddled together with its spouse, head to the west and feet to the stars. On the other hand, it lives forever beneath the tomb, subject to the Chinese‐speaking bureaucracy of Yan Luo Wang 閻羅王/Yama, king of the underworld. Ul mately the speech is a kind of anthropology: an a empt to sympathe cally understand and describe a difficult and alien world of others, in this case dead others. Monday, April 6, 2015 4‐6 p.m. Anthropology 206 Image courtesy of E. Mueggler Addi onal Event for Graduate Students: Lunch me Seminar with Professor Mueggler Tuesday, April 7, 2015, 12‐1 p.m., Anthropology 206 RSVP by April 1 to [email protected] Recommended Reading for seminar: Erik Mueggler, 2014. “Corpse, Stone, Door, Text.” Journal of Asian Studies 73(1): 17‐41. Erik Mueggler, 2011. “Bodies Real and Virtual: Joseph Rock and Enrico Caruso in the Sino‐Tibetan Borderlands.” Compara ve Studies in Society and History 53(1): 6‐37. Co‐sponsored by the Confucius Ins tute at Emory, the Hightower Fund, Religion, Russian and East Asian Languages and Cultures, and East Asian Studies
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