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Images of Anti-Temporality: An Essay in the Anthropology of Experience*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2011
Extract
Let me explain the jagged, cacophonous title of this talk, which must jar on ears expectant of a disquisition on immortality, the leitmotiv of the Ingersoll lecture series. By “anti-temporality” I denote that which is opposite in kind to being temporal, that is, pertaining to, concerned with, or limited by time. By “time” I provisionally accept the first definition offered by the Oxford English Dictionary: “A limited stretch or space of continued existence, as the interval between two successive events or acts or the period through which an action, condition or state continues: a finite portion of ‘time’.” Here, however, I would detect a certain ambiguity in the phrase, “interval between two successive events or acts,” for such intervals may, in many societies, be culturally detached from natural or logical sequentiality and formed into a domain governed by anti-temporality. Here the very definition of time implies its opposite.
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- Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1982
References
1 Blair, Robert, The Grave (London: M. Cooper, 1743) 479.Google Scholar
2 Moore, Sally Falk and Myerhoff, Barbara, Symbol and Politics in Communal Ideology (Ithaca: Cornell University, 1975) 220.Google Scholar
3 Unfinished notes from general conclusion to Gennep, Arnold van, Manuel de folklore français contemporain (Paris: Picard, 1937).Google Scholar
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5 Richmond, “The Rites of Passage and Kutiyattam,” 2.
6 Ibid., 11–12, 13.
7 Richmond and Richmond, “The Multiple Dimensions of Time and Space,” 1–3.
8 Ibid., 3–5.
9 Ibid., 7.
10 Ibid., 8.
11 Ibid., 9.
12 Hügel, Friedrich von, Eternal Life: A Study of Its Implications and Applications (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1912) 383.Google Scholar
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