Carved komari (vulva) stones from Rapa Nui: museum objects, legacy data and contemporary local history

IF 0.4 4区 历史学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
A. Kaeppler, J. V. Tilburg
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The authors examine selected stone objects in the J.L. Young Collection, Bernice P. Bishop Museum, Honolulu. Two were named by Young “Maea Momoa” (ma‘ea momoa; lit. ‘stone for chickens’). One of the ma‘ea momoa is a “pillow stone” (ŋarua) or basaltic beach cobble incised with komari (vulva motifs). The other is a “Bar of stone” lavishly embellished with similar motifs. Six other objects are said to be “fetish stones”. A possible ‘Orongo provenance for the incised “Bar of stone” is raised and tested, and toponymic and linguistic data are offered in support of a new interpretation of the origin of the hakatoro repe ‘elongation of the clitoris’ ritual and the function of one incised “fetish stone” in that process. This research calls attention to the traditional role of women in ‘Orongo ceremonies and employs relatively obscure museum collection objects and their previously overlooked documentation, thus uniting multiple data strands to reveal new details of Rapanui ritual life.
从拉帕努伊岛雕刻的komari(外阴)石头:博物馆物品,遗产数据和当代当地历史
作者研究了檀香山伯尼斯·p·毕晓普博物馆J.L.杨收藏中的精选石器。其中两个被Young命名为“Maea Momoa”(ma 'ea Momoa;比如“鸡用石头”)。其中一种是“枕石”(ŋarua)或玄武岩海滩鹅卵石,上面刻有komari(外阴图案)。另一个是一个“石头酒吧”,上面装饰着类似的图案。其他六件物品据说是“恋物石”。对切割的“石棒”提出了一种可能的“Orongo”来源,并进行了测试,并提供了地名和语言学数据,以支持对“阴蒂延伸”仪式的hakatoro repe起源的新解释,以及在此过程中切割的“恋物石”的功能。这项研究唤起了人们对女性在奥龙戈仪式中的传统角色的关注,并采用了相对晦涩的博物馆藏品和之前被忽视的文献,从而将多个数据线索结合起来,揭示了拉帕努伊仪式生活的新细节。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
16.70%
发文量
5
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