Facing the fire, taking the stage: ritual, performance, and belonging in Buryat communities of Siberia

"In the mid-2000s, Russia's government began to merge autonomous regions (okrugs), including the two regions held by its largest indigenous population, the Mongolic-speaking Buryats, into its Siberian administrative territories. As state institutions used public performances of Buryat cult...

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Bibliographic Details
Subtitles:Ritual, performance, and belonging in Buryat communities of Siberia
Main Author: Long, Joseph J. (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Interlibrary Loan:Interlibrary Loan for the Fachinformationsdienste (Specialized Information Services in Germany)
Published: Bloomington, Indiana Indiana University Press [2025]
In:Year: 2025
Further subjects:B Siberia (Russia) Social life and customs
B Buryats Rites and ceremonies
B Buryats Social life and customs
B Shamanism (Russia (Federation)) (Siberia)
B SOCIAL SCIENCE / Customs & Traditions
B Long, Joseph J Travel (Russia (Federation)) (Siberia)
B Buryats Kinship
B Ustʹ-Ordynskiĭ (Russia) History
B PERFORMING ARTS / Dance / Folk
B Irkutskai︠a︡ oblastʹ (Russia) History
Online Access: Table of Contents (Aggregator)
Description
Summary:"In the mid-2000s, Russia's government began to merge autonomous regions (okrugs), including the two regions held by its largest indigenous population, the Mongolic-speaking Buryats, into its Siberian administrative territories. As state institutions used public performances of Buryat culture to show support for this separation of nationality from territorial sovereignty, the resurgence of everyday rituals reinforced the same custodial ties to Buryat lands which the National Cultural Autonomy policy was designed to eliminate. In Facing the Fire, Taking the Stage, Joseph J. Long provides new insights into the connections between inward-facing Western Buryat shamanist ritual practices and outward-facing institutionalized performing arts. Both forms of cultural expression have created a space for Buryats to constantly negotiate, renegotiate, and make public different kinds of belonging and, in some cases, have blurred the line between private and public. Based primarily on anthropological fieldwork undertaken in Western Buryat territory during the process of dissolution, this book provides firsthand accounts and original photographs of everyday ritual practices, hearth offering rites, tailgan ceremonies, and dance and folklore routines. Facing the Fire, Taking the Stage explores the relationship between shamanic rituals and formal performing arts, showing how post-Soviet public culture and performances are shaped by one another to create new symbols of national identity"--
Item Description:Includes bibliographical references and index
Physical Description:pages cm
ISBN:978-0-253-07118-7
978-0-253-07119-4