The Eye of Balance—A Study on the Ritual Healing Effect of Daliao in Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Region
DOI: 10.23977/jsoce.2023.050916 | Downloads: 10 | Views: 291
Author(s)
Zonghang Wu 1
Affiliation(s)
1 Nanjing Foreign Language School, Nanjing, Jiangsu, 210000, China
Corresponding Author
Zonghang WuABSTRACT
The effects of religious ornaments have always remained mysterious. While believers put faith in the fortune these ornaments bring, materialists doubt their practical effects. I have always been confused by such "magical" things: no one has ever seen their magic, yet they appeal to so many people. Such symbols and ornaments appear in nearly all cultures: the character "fu" (good fortune) in China; the nioh figure in Japan; the scarabs in Egypt, etc. Ritual healing is one purpose of such symbols. In order to better understand what compels people to these symbols as well as their functions, I conducted a study on the ritual healing effects of a local symbol at Xishaungbanna Dai Autonomous Region called Daliao. My presentation is the ethnography below. Bamboo six-pointed-star-shaped ornaments, known as Daliao, are a common sight throughout the Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Region in Yunnan province, hanging on doors and stuck in the ground in fields. Daliao serve as totemic guardians of the village, protecting homes and crops. Only a few studies have focused on the functions of Daliao, and collectively the consensus is that Daliao act as an overwatching eye warding off bad luck. Through field research to Manbian Village, I studied Daliaos’ functions and relating customs. In this paper, I hope to elaborate on the functions of Daliao from a medical-anthropological point of view: that Daliao serve as a stabilizer element in a community. For every community, there is a homeostasis recognized by people as the well-being and good conditions of the community as a whole and intruding this homeostasis or misplacing the elements in it leads to contamination and danger. Daliao helps Dai villagers cope with abnormalities in mind, restore stability and eliminate danger, acting to restore homeostasis in the community in the same way a medicine might within the body of a patient.
KEYWORDS
Daliao; Dai Ethnic Group; Ritual Healing; Dai HerbCITE THIS PAPER
Zonghang Wu, The Eye of Balance—A Study on the Ritual Healing Effect of Daliao in Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Region. Journal of Sociology and Ethnology (2023) Vol. 5: 89-97. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.23977/jsoce.2023.050916.
REFERENCES
[1] Zhu Depu. The Dai artifact "Daliao" and its influence - continuation of "Exploration of the Penetration of Ancient Dai Primitive Religious Culture into Mountainous Areas" [J]. Journal of Minzu University of China, 1995, (01): 53-58.
[2] Qu Yongxian. The Dualistic Belief of the Dai People and Its Performance in Epic [J]. Journal of Bose Academy, 2019 (3).
[3] Douglas, P. M. (2002). Purity and danger. Routledge.
[4] Zhou Xiaoyuwen, & Yu Jianhua. (2019). Review of foreign research on ritual therapy. Medicine and Philosophy, 40(8), 6.
[5] Illich, I. (2003). Medical nemesis. Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, 57(12), 919–922.
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