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Death in Banaras

Death in Banaras

Death in Banaras

Author:
Jonathan P. Parry, London School of Economics and Political Science
Published:
July 1994
Availability:
Available
Format:
Paperback
ISBN:
9780521466257

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£53.99
GBP
Paperback

    As a place to die, to dispose of the physical remains of the deceased and to perform the rites which ensure that the departed attains a 'good state' after death, the north Indian city of Banaras attracts pilgrims and mourners from all over the Hindu world. This book is primarily about the priests and other kinds of 'sacred specialists' who serve them: about the way in which they organise their business, and about their representations of death and understanding of the rituals over which they preside. All three levels are informed by a common ideological preoccupation with controlling chaos and contingency. The anthropologist who writes about death inevitably writes about the world of the living, and Dr Parry is centrally concerned with concepts of the body and the person in contemporary Hinduism; with ideas about hierarchy, renunciation and sacrifice, and with the relationship between hierarchy and notions of complementarity and holism.

    • Author very well known both for work on Banaras and theoretical contribution to anthropology of death
    • Though a difficult subject, extremely lucid exposition
    • Equal appeal to anthropologist and Indologist

    Product details

    July 1994
    Paperback
    9780521466257
    344 pages
    229 × 152 × 20 mm
    0.51kg
    12 b/w illus. 6 maps 9 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • Part I. Death and the City:
    • 1. Through 'divine eyes'
    • 2. A profane perspective
    • Part II. Death as a Living:
    • 3. Shares and chicanery
    • 4. Giving, receiving and bargaining over gifts
    • Part III. Death into Birth:
    • 5. The last sacrifice
    • 6. Ghosts into ancestors
    • 7. Spirit possession as 'superstition'
    • Part IV. The End of Death:
    • 8. Asceticism and the conquest of death.
      Author
    • Jonathan P. Parry , London School of Economics and Political Science
    • Anthony T. Carter