War and Shadows

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A01=Mai Lan Gustafsson
ancestor reverence
Author_Mai Lan Gustafsson
Category=JBGB
comparative folklore
Con Ma
contemporary Vietnamese culture
cultural traditions
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ghost stories
haunting in post-war Vietnam
mythology
real ghost stories
Southeast Asia
spirit attachment
spirit possession across cultures
spiritualism
supernatural southeast asian
Vietnam studies
Vietnam war effects
Vietnam war ghosts
Vietnamese anthropology
Vietnamese burial rituals
Vietnamese burial traditions
Vietnamese culture
Vietnamese customs
Vietnamese ethnography
Vietnamese folklore
Vietnamese ghosts
Vietnamese hauntings
Vietnamese history
vietnamese mythology
Vietnamese society
Vietnamese spirit possession
Vietnamese spirits
Vietnamese spiritual practics
Vietnamese studies
Vietnamese supernatural
Vietnamese traditions
Vietnamese war
Vietnamese war spirits
war ghost stories

Product details

  • ISBN 9780801447709
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jul 2009
  • Publisher: Cornell University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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War and Shadows is a fascinating book packed with vibrant stories and lucid exploration of their significance. Mai Lan Gustafsson's account of spirit possession in Vietnam is both nuanced and sympathetic. ― Ann Marie Leshkowich, College of the Holy Cross

Vietnamese culture and religious traditions place the utmost importance on dying well: in old age, body unblemished, with surviving children, and properly buried and mourned. More than five million people were killed in the Vietnam War, many of them young, many of them dying far from home. Another 300,000 are still missing. Having died badly, they are thought to have become angry ghosts, doomed to spend eternity in a kind of spirit hell. Decades after the war ended, many survivors believe that the spirits of those dead and missing have returned to haunt their loved ones. In War and Shadows, the anthropologist Mai Lan Gustafsson tells the story of the anger of these spirits and the torments of their kin.

Gustafsson's rich ethnographic research allows her to bring readers into the world of spirit possession, focusing on the source of the pain, the physical and mental anguish the spirits bring, and various attempts to ameliorate their anger through ritual offerings and the intervention of mediums. Through a series of personal life histories, she chronicles the variety of ailments brought about by the spirits' wrath, from headaches and aching limbs (often the same limb lost by a loved one in battle) to self-mutilation. In Gustafsson's view, the Communist suppression of spirit-based religion after the fall of Saigon has intensified anxieties about the well-being of the spirit world. While shrines and mourning are still allowed, spirit mediums were outlawed and driven underground, along with many of the other practices that might have provided some comfort. Despite these restrictions, she finds, victims of these hauntings do as much as possible to try to lay their ghosts to rest.

Mai Lan Gustafsson is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Christopher Newport University.

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