TY - JOUR
T1 - Animating the Ancestors in the Anthropology of the Trobriands1
T2 - Ways of Baloma: Rethinking Magic and Kinship from the Trobriands Mark Mosko Chicago, Hau Books (Malinowski Monograph Series), 2017
AU - Jolly, Margaret
PY - 2019/8/8
Y1 - 2019/8/8
N2 - The Trobriand Islands in Papua New Guinea has been portrayed as a unique and sacred place in the genealogy of the discipline of anthropology, and especially that lineage which reveres Bronislaw Malinowski as one of its founding fathers. Mark Moskos recent book Ways of Baloma insists on the centrality of baloma (ancestral spirits) as palpable, perduring presences in the lives of contemporary Trobriand Islanders. We might say that this book also animates the baloma, the ancestral spirit of Malinowski, not so much through rituals of reverence but through iconoclastic arguments which erode the empirical and theoretical foundations of Malinowskis corpus and much of the voluminous anthropological literature on the Trobriands.
AB - The Trobriand Islands in Papua New Guinea has been portrayed as a unique and sacred place in the genealogy of the discipline of anthropology, and especially that lineage which reveres Bronislaw Malinowski as one of its founding fathers. Mark Moskos recent book Ways of Baloma insists on the centrality of baloma (ancestral spirits) as palpable, perduring presences in the lives of contemporary Trobriand Islanders. We might say that this book also animates the baloma, the ancestral spirit of Malinowski, not so much through rituals of reverence but through iconoclastic arguments which erode the empirical and theoretical foundations of Malinowskis corpus and much of the voluminous anthropological literature on the Trobriands.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85068103345&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/14442213.2019.1623006
DO - 10.1080/14442213.2019.1623006
M3 - Review article
SN - 1444-2213
VL - 20
SP - 362
EP - 368
JO - Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology
JF - Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology
IS - 4
ER -