"Formations of Ritual "was first published in 1994. Minnesota
Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable
books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the
original University of Minnesota Press editions.
Yaktovil is an elaborate healing ceremony employed by Sinhalas
in Sri Lanka to dispel the effects of the eyesight of a pantheon of
malevolent supernatural figures known as yakku. Anthropology,
traditionally, has articulated this ceremony with the concept
metaphor of "demonism." Yet, as David Scott demonstrates in this
provocative book, this use of "demonism" reveals more about the
discourse of anthropology than it does about the ritual itself. His
investigation of yaktovil and yakku within the Sinhala cosmology is
also an inquiry into the ways in which anthropology, by ignoring
the discursive history of the rituals, religions, and relationships
it seeks to describe, tends to reproduce ideological-often,
specifically colonial-objects.To do this, Scott describes the
discursive apparatus through which yakku are positioned in the
moral universe of Sinhala, traces the appearance of yakku and
yaktovil in Western discourse, evaluates the contribution of these
figures and this ceremony in anthropology, and attempts to show how
the larger anthropology of Buddhism, in which the anthropology of
yaktovil is embedded, might be reconfigured. Finally, he offers a
rereading of the ritual in terms of the historically selfconscious
approach he proposes.The result points to a major rethinking of the
historical nature not only of the objects, but also of the concepts
through which they are constructed in anthropological
discourse.
David Scott teaches in the Department of Anthropology at the
University of Chicago.
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