LINGUIST List 36.1271

Thu Apr 17 2025

Books: The Oxford Handbook of Ritual Language: Tavárez (ed.) (2025)

Editor for this issue: Joel Jenkins <joellinguistlist.org>



Date: 15-Apr-2025
From: Rachel Havard <Rachel.HAVARDoup.com>
Subject: The Oxford Handbook of Ritual Language: Tavárez (ed.) (2025)
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Title: The Oxford Handbook of Ritual Language
Series Title: Oxford Handbooks
Publication Year: 2025

Publisher: Oxford University Press
http://www.oup.com/us
Book URL: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-oxford-handbook-of-ritual-language-9780192868091?utm_source=linguistlist&utm_medium=listserv&utm_campaign=linguistics

Editor(s): David Tavárez

Abstract:

This volume brings together representative case studies and surveys that explore research into ritual language, covering theoretical and methodological approaches that reflect traditional inquiries and more recent studies. This recent literature contends that ritual language hinges on the construction of authoritative ontological models about the cosmos and its inhabitants. Ritual speech also orchestrates performances that articulate representations of collective identities, and rests on the diversity of hierarchical forms of authoritative knowledge, displayed in both oblique and direct terms. Moreover, performances, texts, and narratives associated with ritual practices are closely entwined with historical accounts that navigate current memories, recast in a diversity of ways, about ancestral beings and distant or recent pasts, or delimit a terrain in which dialectical relationships with colonial hegemony and Christian indoctrination emerge to transform the social order. Ritual narrative often offers in its structure and delivery momentous representation of the social order, social institutions, social difference, and collective identities, and may also be constituted by claims about relations among species, non-human actors, and material culture.

'The Oxford Handbook of Ritual Language' addresses foundational questions regarding the scope, structuring, use, and consequences of ritual language. The chapters examine the relationship between speakers' consciousness and verbal ritual performances, and between ritual language, hegemony, collective authority, and the social world. As the study of ritual speech hinges on extensive analyses of linguistic choices and styles, the contributors draw on data from a wide range of language groups and societies in the Americas, the Middle East, the Pacific, South Asia, and the Indian Ocean.

Linguistic Field(s): Anthropological Linguistics
Sociolinguistics




Page Updated: 17-Apr-2025


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