Is There a Relationship between Ritual and Cliche?: Indigenous Fijian Criticism of Kava Drinking
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Tomlinson, Matt
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
This article poses the question of what analytical insight can be gained by comparing
ritual and cliché, both of which involve evaluations of the significance of repetition. The
case study is kava-drinking sessions in indigenous Fiji. Whether purposeful or casual,
kava-drinking sessions always follow rules which give them significant form and
regularity of the kind some anthropologists consider definitive of ritual practice. Yet
many indigenous Fijians criticise present-day kava-drinking sessions for several
reasons. One prominent line of criticism is that kava drinking is now a matter of too
much repetition – too many people drinking too much too often – and losing the
meaningful link to chiefly tradition as a result. Analysing criticism of ritual in terms
of cliché clarifies situations in which the iconic force of repetition is treated as an
index of excess.
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Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology
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2037-12-31
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