Ancestral Presence

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A01=Eric Hirsch
Aling Myth
Author_Eric Hirsch
Category=JHMC
Central Mission Station
Colonial Administration
colonial impact studies
Colonialism
Creator Force
Dog's Teeth
Eclectus Parrot
Eclectus Roratus
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic methodology
Follow
Foreign Spirits
Fuyuge cosmological change analysis
Fuyuge's cosmology
Fuyuge's myth
historical transformation theory
indigenous ritual change
Lot's Wife
Melanesian anthropology
Melanesian Peoples
Melanesian Societies
Melanesian's anthropology
Mission Christianity
missionary encounters
Missionary Myth
Pentecostal Christianity
Pig Killing
Pig Sacrifices
Plaza
Port Moresby
Ritual Plaza
Ritual Village
String Band Music
Tok Pisin
True Manner
Vasa
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367684914
  • Weight: 260g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Aug 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Ancestral Presence tells a history that has more than one history in it while also telling the story of the relation between worlds.

For the Fuyuge people of the Papuan highlands, the past is not ‘history’ in a conventional sense. For them, the world and its history derive from a creator force called Tidibe which is central to Fuyuge cosmology: the Fuyuge are at the ‘centre of the world’. But Fuyuge people are part of another history, too: they have experienced decades of mission and government influence from centres of power located elsewhere, to which their mountain home is marginal and remote. Through a detailed exploration of Fuyuge myth, changes to ritual life and cosmology, Eric Hirsch weaves an account of the relationship between these two histories. He documents the real changes wrought by colonialism, government and Christianity from the late nineteenth century to the turn of the millennium. Yet this is not a story of ‘continuity and change’. Hirsch demonstrates how transformation was always central to Fuyuge life: changes brought by missionaries and government were processes they themselves initiated in the ancestral past through Tidibe, the cosmological creator force.

Engaging in debates that have been pivotal to Melanesian anthropology, the book presents an ethnographically rich account of a distinctive world, cosmology and ideas of historical change. It also raises questions regarding assumptions central to Western History, its worldview and ideas of historical time.

Eric Hirsch is Reader in Anthropology at Brunel University London. He has a longstanding interest in the anthropology and history of Papua New Guinea and Melanesia more generally. His most recent publication is The Melanesian World (co-edited with Will Rollason), Routledge, 2019.

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