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7 - ‘It is only thanks to me that you were circumcised’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 May 2010

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Summary

Thus far, we have looked at some of the simpler processes at work in culture, the punctuation into domains, themes, representational symbolism and basic forms of process relating one classification to another. The study of liminality involves a higher level of analysis, in that the marker ‘liminality’ already requires a preliminary categorisation before it can enter into other systems.

Liminality is portrayed in Dowayo culture above all in the classification of relationships. Kinship relations are firmly affective. Parents are warm and affectionate but sexuality must never be mentioned before mother or sister. Parents-in-law are treated with great respect. Sexuality is never to be mentioned. One should never look them directly in the face when speaking to them. A woman should adopt ‘respect posture’ (on knees, hands over genitals, face averted) when speaking to her husband's father, as should a man when speaking to his wife's mother. A man has a special relationship with his nephew or niece. They are expected to be mutually free and intimate. They may make free with each other's possessions. The relationship is of great ceremonial importance.

Quite distinct from these links are another series of relationships. In life a man acquires a number of ‘brothers of circumcision’, men who underwent circumcision in the same year as himself. Clearly, he cannot know every single man who was circumcised that year, especially if they are from the other end of Dowayoland. Out of this group, therefore, he will select some small number with whom he has regular contacts and these will become ‘his’ brothers of circumcision. Similarly, a woman acquires ‘sisters of circumcision’ who began menstruating in the same year as herself.

Type
Chapter
Information
Symbolic Structures
An Exploration of the Culture of the Dowayos
, pp. 70 - 79
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1983

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