Monday, April 8, 2013

Anikó Sebestény - 03/05/2013 - 4 pm

Anikó Sebestény is an anthropologist and doctoral student at Nanterre University (France) and Pécs University (Hungary).



Title: "Daily Domestic Offerings versus Tourism in Bali"
Date, Time, Place: 03/05/2013, 4pm, Salle de Réunion du Pavillon Jardin

Abstract:
  Is this small offering basket presented daily in every Balinese home a religious „priming device" that contributed to the perpetuation of Balinese religious traditions despite the general presence of tourism?
In this talk, I will present the main ideas of my PhD, a work in progress, on daily offerings in Bali. Drawing on both my education and experience as anthropologist who did "real" fieldwork, and my education in cognitive sciences, I am presenting a case study about Balinese domestic rituals.
Using the anthropological methods, through participant observation, I am analysing how domestic rituals shape domestic ritual geography, "reactivate" domestic altars, create social and economic networks in the neighborhood, and shape the belief in the ancestor's influence on people's life.
To get a clearer image about belief in the aftelife, linked with belief in the ancestors, I chose to use experimental methods. I replicated Astuti and Harris's study (2008) on the effect of religious context on after-life beliefs. Astuti's findings show that in Madagascar, the context priming (a hospital story versus a ritual story) had a significant effect on the mental capacities attributed to the dead. In Bali, I did not find a significant context effect. Instead of claiming that my results go against Astuti's findings, I claim, based on my fieldwork observations, that the daily rituals have a strong context-creating power, stronger than the context-creating prime stories used in Astuti's study.
Approaching the same object – the daily offering ritual – from two angles, on different levels, using social anthropology and cognitive approach, I aim to gain a deep understanding of the complex implications of having offering ritual performed daily in mostly each Balinese home.
I claim that these rituals, creating a strong context effect, also account for the adaptability of Balinese people: daytime, they work for tourists who are mostly atheists. In the evening, they go home and find altars, and offerings. They move successfully between two different contexts, that call for different implication and behaviour.

Reference:
Astuti, R., and Harris, P.L. (2008). Understanding mortality and the life of the ancestors in rural Madagascar. Cognitive Science 32, 713–740.