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by Debbora Battaglia (Author)
Sabarl island-created, in myth, from the bones of a serpent-is a coral atoll in the Louisiade archipelago of Papua New Guinea. The Sabarl speak of themselves as true "islanders" persons separated from the means of both physical and social survival. The Sabarl struggle for continuity-of the physical and social person and of social relations, of cultureal values, of paternal influence in a matrilineal society-is the subject of Debbora Battaglia's sensitive ethnography of loss and reconstruction: the first major work on cultural responses to mortality in the southern Massim culture area and an important contribution to studies of personhood in Melanesia.
One of the 'new ethnographies' addressing the limits of ethnographic representation and the fragmented nature of knowledge from an indigenous perspective, her finely wrought study explores the dynamics of cultural practices in which deconstruction is integral to construction, allowing a new perspective on the ephemeral nature of sociality in Melanesia and new insight into the efficacy of cultural images more generally.
Debbora Battaglia is associate professor of anthropology at Mount Holyoke College.
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