Making Parents
First-Birth Ritual among the Ankave-Anga of Papua New Guinea
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1558/arsr.v22i2.214Keywords:
First-Birth Rituals, Male initiations, Kin Relations, Manhood, ParenthoodAbstract
Although the birth of children is a quite common event, it is not an easy experience for the Ankave-Anga women of Papua New Guinea, who have all heard of or even seen relatives die after delivery. The Ankave live in the far northern part of Gulf Province, far from its headquarters located on the southern coast, and do not yet have permanent church or health services that could accompany women in labour and save them in the event of difficulties. This situation may well have to do with the local importance of the rituals associated with the arrival of a first child, but this is not the point the paper would actually focus on. It would rather undertake an analysis of this ritual, which has the particularity of not being reducible to one specific moment but entails a series of gestures, attitudes, taboos and gifts that concern a wide range of kin and affines from the time when the pregnancy is known to the days that follow the birth. It is made up of secret gendered moments as well as public ones and results in a new parental pair that will thus become able to accomplish on their own what is needed for subsequent children to be fully integrated into the community. While these kinds of ritual have regionally been considered as one phase of male initiations (without much being said about it in the literature devoted to Anga groups; Herdt 1981, Godelier 1982), I argue that, among the Ankave (a southern Anga people), first-birth rituals are much more than the last stage of a male ritual cycle. The actions of everyone linked to the parents-to-be, together with the involvement of the parents themselves, point to both accession to parenthood for men and women alike and the expression of the avuncular relationship as a focus of the ritual.References
Bonnemère, Pascale 1996 Le pandanus rouge: corps, différence des sexes et parenté chez les Ankave-Anga. CNRS Éditions / Éditions de la MSH, Paris.
Quand les hommes répliquent une gestation: une analyse des représentations et des rites de la croissance et de la maturation des garçons chez les Ankave-Anga (Papouasie Nouvelle-Guinée). In La production du corps: approches anthropologiques et historiques, edited by Maurice Godelier and Michel Panoff, 81-113. Éditions des archives contemporaines, Amsterdam.
Le traitement du placenta en Océanie. Des sens différents pour une même pratique. Science sociales et santé 18(3): 29-36.
Du corps au lien: l’implication des mères dans les initiations masculines des Ankave-Anga. In Ce que le genre fait aux personnes, edited by Irène Théry et Pascale Bonnemère, 75-90. Éditions de l’EHESS, Paris.
Forthcoming Histoire de l’échec d’une conversion: trente ans d’incursions missionnaires en pays ankave (1972–2002). In The Dynamics of Pacific Religiosity, edited by Françoise Douaire-Marsaudon and Gabriele Weichart.
Bonnemère, Pascale (ed.) 2004 Women as Unseen Characters: Male Ritual in Papua New Guinea. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.
Bonnemère, Pascale, and Pierre Lemonnier 2007 Drumming to Forget: Ordinary Life and Ceremonies among a Papua New Guinea Group of Forest-Dwellers / Les tambours de l’oubli : la vie ordinaire et cérémonielle d’un peuple de Papouasie. Au Vent des Îles, Papeete / Musée du Quai Branly, Paris.
Doja, Albert 2005 Rethinking the Couvade. Anthropological Quarterly 78(4): 917-50. doi:10.1353/anq.2005.0053.
Douglas, Mary 1968 The Relevance of Tribal Studies. Journal of Psychosomatic Research 12: 21-28. doi:10.1016/0022-3999(68)90005-6.
Duke, Trevor 1999 Decline in Child Health in Rural Papua New Guinea. The Lancet 354: 1291-94. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(99)00335-9.
Fiti-Sinclair, Rita 2002 Childbirth in Papua New Guinean Villages and in Port Moresby General Hospital. In Lukere and Jolly 2002: 56-78.
Frazer, George 1910 Totemism and Exogamy: A Treatise in Certain Early Forms of Superstition and Society, vol. IV; Macmillan & Co., London.
Godelier, Maurice 1986 [1982] The Making of Great Men: Male Domination and Power among the New Guinea Baruya. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Herdt, Gilbert H. 1981 Guardians of the Flutes: Idioms of Masculinity. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
The Sambia: Ritual and Gender in New Guinea. Holt, Rinehart & Wilson, New York.
Herdt, Gilbert H. (ed.) 1982 Rituals of Manhood: Male Initiation in Papua New Guinea. University of California Press, Berkeley.
Jolly, Margaret 2002 Introduction. Birthing Beyond the Confinements of Tradition and Modernity? In Lukere and Jolly 2002: 1-30.
Langness, Lewis L. 1999 Men and ‘Woman’ in New Guinea. Chandler & Sharp, Novato, CA.
Lemonnier, Pierre 1981 Le commerce inter-tribal des Anga de Nouvelle-Guinée. Journal de la Société des Océanistes 37: 39-75.
Lévi-Strauss, Claude 1966 [1962] The Savage Mind. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London.
Lukere, Vicki, and Margaret Jolly (eds.) 2002 Birthing in the Pacific: Beyond Tradition and Modernity? University of Hawai’i Press, Honolulu.
Lutkehaus, Nancy C., and Paul B. Roscoe (eds.) 1995 Gender Rituals: Female Initiation in Melanesia. Routledge, New York.
Malinowski, Bronislaw 1927 Sex and Repression in a Savage Society. Routledge, London.
Menget, Patrick 1979 Temps de naître, temps d’être: la couvade. In La fonction symbolique : essais d’anthropologie, edited by Michel Izard and Pierre Smith, 245-64. Gallimard, Paris.
Merrett-Balkos, Leanne 1998 Just Add Water: Remaking Women through Child-birth, Anganem, Southern Highlands, Papua New Guinea. In Maternities and Modernities: Colonial and Postcolonial Experiences in Asia and the Pacific, edited by Kalpana Ram and Margaret Jolly, 213-38. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Mimica, Jadran 1981 Omalyce: An Ethnography of the Ikwaye View of the Cosmos. PhD diss., Australian National University, Canberra.
The Incest Passions: An Outline of the Logic of the Iqwaye Social Organization. Oceania 62(2): 81-113.
Munroe, Robert L., Ruth H. Munroe, and John W.M. Whiting 1973 The Couvade: A Psychological Analysis. Ethos 1: 30-74. doi:10.1525/eth.1973.1.1.02a00030.
Poole, Fitz John Porter 1982 Couvade and Clinic in a New Guinea Society: Birth among the Bimin-Kuskusmin. In The Use and Abuse of Medicine, edited by Marten W. de Vries, Robert L. Berg, and Mack Lipkin, 54-95. Praeger Publishers, New York.
Rival, Laura 1998 Androgynous Parents and Guest Children: The Huaorani Couvade. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 4(4): 619-42. doi:10.2307/3034825.
Rivière, Pierre G. 1974 The Couvade: A Problem Reborn. Man 9: 423-35. doi:10.2307/2800693.
Strathern, Marilyn 1988 The Gender of the Gift: Problems with Women and Problems with Society. University of California Press, Berkeley.
Tuzin, Don 1984 Miraculous Voices: The Auditory Experience of Numinous Objects. Current Anthropology 25: 579-96.
Published
Issue
Section
License
Equinox Publishing Ltd.