Ritually orchestrated seascapes: Hunting magic and Dugong bone mounds in Torres Strait, NE Australia

被引:77
作者
McNiven, IJ [1 ]
Feldman, R [1 ]
机构
[1] Monash Univ, Sch Geography Environm Sci, Clayton, Vic 3800, Australia
关键词
LANDSCAPE; ISLANDS; PLACE;
D O I
10.1017/S0959774303000118
中图分类号
K85 [文物考古];
学科分类号
0601 ;
摘要
People dwell in a world of their own subjective making. For many hunters, engagement with the natural world is a negotiated affair because animals, like people, possess spirits. A critical part of the negotiation process is mediation of the human-prey relationship by hunting magic. Torres Strait Islanders of NE Australia are skilled hunters of dugongs, a marine mammal whose capture entails a broad range of ritual practices. Following ethnographic expectations, excavation of bone mounds reveals ritual treatment of dugong bones,expecially skulls, to increase hunting success. Extensive use of dugong bones in ritual sites has important implications for the extent to which secular middle deposits are representative of Islander subsistence practices. Since dugong bone mounds provide archaeological insights into Islander spiritual relationships with dugongs, chronological changes in use of these sites inform us about historical developments in Islander ontology and their ritual orchestration of seascapes and spiritual connections to the sea.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 194
页数:26
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