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American Ethnologist
Contents of Volume 28, Number 4
articles
752 blackness and the politics of memory in the New Orleans second line
Helen A. Regis
 

Popular memorial practices, including traditional jazz funeral processions, are continually being refashioned and re-appropriated for devotional, commercial, and political purposes in New Orleans. Belying nostalgic representations of the jazz funeral as a "dying tradition," neighborhood-based parades produced by working-class African Americans continue to provide a space for the articulation of local subjectivities, particularly for those most affected by the violence of contemporary urban life. [blackness, memory, New Orleans, urban space, performance, violence, heritage]

 

778 revisiting "magical fright"
Bruce Lincoln
 

In 1948, John Gillin published the first sustained account of a ritual healing ceremony for soul loss as performed in the highlands of Guatemala. Reprinted in Lessa and Vogt’s Reader in Comparative Religion (1958, 1965), this article played a foundational role for later work in ethnomedicine and the anthropology of religion. Gillin’s analysis centered on the way relations between Indian and ladino populations were renegotiated within the ritual imaginary. Newly available archival materials show that Gillin underestimated the fear and animosity dividing these groups, misconstrued the political situation of the curandero (traditional healer), and effaced the extent to which gender and domestic violence were at issue in both illness and healing. These materials also afford glimpses into the system of power and knowledge in which Gillin participated and that helped shape his research agenda. An epilogue extends this discussion into the Cold War context. [ritual, susto, curanderismo, Mesoamerica, John Gillin, history of anthropology, Cold War]

 

803 ritual killing, 419, and fast wealth: inequality and the popular imagination in southeastern Nigeria
Daniel Jordan Smith
 

In this article, I situate a seemingly fantastic series of events in Nigeria in a context that renders them meaningful and acknowledges their intimate connection to everyday issues of wealth, power, and inequality. Focusing on popular stories of the occult circulating in the wake of a widely publicized case of ritual killing, I argue that these stories depict popular discontent over inequality, but also Nigerians’ ambivalence about and critical awareness of their own role in maintaining patron-clientism. [Nigeria, patronage, inequality, witchcraft]

 

827 rehearsed spontaneity and the conventionality of ritual: disciplines of salat
Saba Mahmood
 

In the anthropology of ritual, one productive area of debate has focused on how the formal and conventional character of ritualized behavior is linked to, or distinct from, informal, routine, and pragmatic activity. In this article, I engage and extend this debate by analyzing various understandings of the Muslim act of prayer (salat) among a women’s piety movement in contemporary Cairo, Egypt. Rather than assume a priori that conventional gestures and behaviors necessarily accomplish the same goals, I inquire into the variable relationships assigned to rule-governed behavior within different conceptions of the self under particular regimes of truth, power, and authority. In the second half of the article, I link my analysis of ritual to issues of embodiment, emotions, and individual autonomy, examining parallel conceptions of salat that coexist in some tension in contemporary Egypt. [ritual, embodiment, emotions, discipline, subject formation, Islam]

 

854 "buy me a bride": death and exchange in northern Japanese bride-doll marriage
Ellen Schattschneider
 

In the northern Japanese memorial practice of "bride-doll marriage," which emerged during World War II, the soul of a dead child is married to a spirit spouse embodied in a consecrated figurine. These marriages stimulate limited exchange relationships between the living and dead by building on old and new modes of gifting and circulation, including the prestation of Bodhisattva statues, affinity, transmigration, and the abstraction of social relations made possible by modern commodity forms. Motivated by a strong sense of unfulfilled obligation toward the deceased, these restricted acts of exchange culminate in the cessation of exchange transactions between the living and specific dead persons. In this respect, spirit marriage is profoundly unlike conventional marriage among the living, which leads to ramifying exchange relations between a growing number of persons over time. [Japan, memorialization, mortuary ritual, commodities, Buddhism]

 

881 the Maasai and the Lion King: authenticity, nationalism, and globalization in African tourism
Edward M. Bruner
 

In this article, I analyze how the Maasai of Kenya are presented in three different tourist performances--postcolonial, postindependence, and postmodern. Each site tells a different story, an alternate version of history, with its own perspective on the role of ethnicity and heritage within the nation-state and in the world community. Using a method of controlled comparison, I expand the theoretical dialogue in tourism debates by departing from the monolithic discourse that has characterized so much of tourism scholarship. [ethnic tourism, Maasai, globalization, performance, authenticity, ethnography, media images]

 

review article
909 the unheimlich man-oeuvre
Adam Lutzker and Judy Rosenthal

 

book reviews


924
 

reproducing jews: a cultural account of assisted conception in Israel (Kahn)
Jeffrey D. Feldman
925 African fractals: modern computing and indigenous design (Eglash)
Mazyar Lotfalian
926 voices of the land: identity and ecology in the margins (Hornborg and Kurkiala, eds.)
David J. Boyd
928 Mayan people within and beyond boundaries: social categories and lived identity in Yucatan (Hervik)
Ana M. Ju rez
929 indigenous South Americans of the past and present: an ecological perspective (Wilson)
Anthony Stocks
930 dealing with alcohol: indigenous usage in Australia, New Zealand and Canada (Saggers and Gray)
Nathan Gould
932 legalizing moves: Salvadoran immigrants’ struggle for U.S. residency (Coutin); finding a moral heart for U.S. immigration policy: an anthropological perspective (Heyman)
Sarah J. Mahler
934 nature and culture in the Andes (Gade)
Susan Paulson
935 Ladakh: culture, history, and development between Himalaya and Karakoram (Van Beek, Bertelsen, and Pedersen, eds.)
Peter Sutherland
937 varieties of Javanese religion: an anthropological account (Beatty)
Eldar Braten
938 the consumer revolution in urban China (Davis, ed); Japanese consumer behavior: from worker bees to wary shoppers (McCreery)
Hai Ren
940 refashioning futures: criticism after postcoloniality (Scott)
Hirokazu Miyazaki
941 disputes and arguments amongst nomads (Hayden)
Anupama Rao
942 re-drawing boundaries: work, households, and gender in China (Entwisle and Henderson, eds.)
Carolyn L. Hsu
944

even in Sweden: racism, racialized spaces, and the popular geographical imagination (Pred)
Uli Linke

945 meanings of violence: a cross-cultural perspective (Aijmer and Abbink, eds.)
Daniel T. Linger
947 the orient strikes back: a global view of cultural display (Hendry)
Aviad E. Raz
948 burden of dreams: history and identity in post-Soviet Ukraine (Wanner)
Daphne Berdahl
949 the blood of Guatemala--a history of race and nation (Grandin)
Victoria Sanford
950 growing old in el barrio (Freidenberg)
Jacob Climo
952 commodities and globalization: anthropological perspectives (Haugerud, Stone, and Little, eds.)
Kalman Applbaum
953 passions of the tongue: language devotion in Tamil India, 1891-1970 (Ramaswamy)
Richard Scherl
954 high tech and high heels in the global economy: women, work, and pink-collar identities in the Caribbean (Freeman)
Karen Richman
956 wake the town and tell the people: dancehall culture in Jamaica (Stolzoff)
Donald Hill
957 antler on the sea: the Yup’ik and Chukchi of the Russian Far East (Kerttula)
Patty A. Gray
958 beyond kinship: social and material reproduction in house societies (Joyce and Gillespie, eds.)
Stephen Hugh-Jones