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A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia

Adapting Body Ritual Among the Nacirema

What follows is an assignment I gave to a group of middle school students.   Part of the assignment was to work with a specific paragraph.  I assigned these paragraphs to students at the time I distributed their assignment sheets.  (If paragraphs are too much for your students, assign sentences.)   After the students submitted their written work, we read and compared each student's translation and the original from which it came.  Once we had completed the entire article, we discussed how it was that Miner was able to make commonplace things so unfamiliar.

Instructions

Read the following excerpts from the article Body Ritual Among the Nacirema. When you are finished, carefully reread your assigned paragraph. Circle or highlight each word or phrase in it that you do not understand. After finishing, use your Webster’s Tenth New Collegiate Dictionary to look up each item you’ve circled or highlighted. Upon completion, you should have a better idea of what your paragraph means. On a separate sheet of paper, rewrite it in your own words. Proofread your work for spelling, punctuation, capitalization, clarity, legibility, complete sentences and neatness. Prepare a final draft. Head it with your name, the class name, the assignment number, and the due date. Hand in the best work of which you are capable.  Make a copy of your final draft to use in class during our discussion of this article.

Excerpts from Body Ritual Among the Nacirema
by Horace Miner
University of Michigan
Originally published in the journal American Anthropologist (1956, #58, pages 503-7)

While much of the people's time is devoted to economic pursuits, a large part of the fruits of these labors and a considerable portion of the day are spent in ritual activity. The focus of this activity is the human body, the appearance and health of which loom as a dominant concern in the ethos of the people. While such a concern is certainly not unusual, its ceremonial aspects and associated philosophy are unique.

The fundamental belief underlying the whole system appears to be that the human body is ugly and that its natural tendency is to debility and disease. Incarcerated in such a body, man's only hope is to avert these characteristics through the use of the powerful influences of ritual and ceremony. Every household has one or more shrines devoted to this purpose. The more powerful individuals in the society have several shrines in their houses and, in fact, the opulence of a house is often referred to in terms of the number of such ritual centers it possesses. Most houses are of wattle and daub construction, but the shrine rooms of the more wealthy are walled with stone. Poorer families imitate the rich by applying pottery plaques to their shrine walls.

While each family has at least one such shrine, the rituals associated with it are not family ceremonies but are private and secret. The rites are normally only discussed with children, and then only during the period when they are being initiated into these mysteries. I was able, however, to establish sufficient rapport with the natives to examine these shrines and to have the rituals described to me.

The focal point of the shrine is a box or chest which is built into the wall. In this chest are kept the many charms and magical potions without which no native believes he could live. These preparations are secured from a variety of specialized practitioners. The most powerful of these are the medicine men, whose assistance must be rewarded with substantial gifts. However, the medicine men do not provide the curative potions for their clients, but decide what the ingredients should be and then write them down in an ancient and secret language. This writing is understood only by the medicine men and by the herbalists who, for another gift, provide the required charm.

Beneath the charm-box is a small font. Each day every member of the family, in succession, enters the shrine room, bows his head before the charm-box, mingles different sorts of holy water in the font, and proceeds with a brief rite of ablution. The holy waters are secured from the Water Temple of the community, where the priests conduct elaborate ceremonies to make the liquid ritually pure.

In the hierarchy of magical practitioners, and below the medicine men in prestige, are specialists whose designation is best translated "holy-mouth-men." The Nacirema have an almost pathological horror of and fascination with the mouth, the condition of which is believed to have a supernatural influence on all social relationships. Were it not for the rituals of the mouth, they believe that their teeth would fall out, their gums bleed, their jaws shrink, their friends desert them, and their lovers reject them. They also believe that a strong relationship exists between oral and moral characteristics. For example, there is a ritual ablution of the mouth for children which is supposed to improve their moral fiber.

The daily body ritual performed by everyone includes a mouth-rite. Despite the fact that these people are so punctilious about care of the mouth, this rite involves a practice which strikes the uninitiated stranger as revolting. It was reported to me that the ritual consists of inserting a small bundle of hog hairs into the mouth, along with certain magical powders, and then moving the bundle in a highly formalized series of gestures.

Most of the population shows definite masochistic tendencies. It was to these that Professor Linton referred in discussing a distinctive part of the daily body ritual which is performed only by men. This part of the rite involves scraping and lacerating the surface of the face with a sharp instrument. Special women's rites are performed only four times during each lunar month, but what they lack in frequency is made up in barbarity. As part of this ceremony, women bake their heads in small ovens for about an hour.


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original web posting: Friday, July 9, 1999
last modified: Friday, April 08, 2005