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Mamanwa Ritual Dances of Surigao del Sur

Authors: Nancy Marie M. Arimang

DOI: https://doi.org/10.37082/IJIRMPS.2022.v10i03.004

Short DOI: https://doi.org/gp7z8z

Country: Philippines

Abstract: Mamanwa ritual dances do not only define but also, more importantly, direct the choreographic ideas and history of the Mamanwas. The purpose of this ethnographic study was to ascertain the fundamental characteristics of Mamanwa ritual dances in terms of their nature, clothing, accessories and equipment, dance patterns, musical accompaniment, tempo, and the cultural values expressed in each ritual dance. The ethnographic approach was employed in this study to gain a thorough understanding of the ritual dances. It extensively used observations, analytical description, and qualitative judgment or interpretation in order to provide a comprehensive picture of Mamanwa ritual dances in Lanuza, Cortes, and Buenavista. Mamanwa ritual dances are conducted to express gratitude, thanksgiving and beseech favors from Tahaw, their supreme god. They make extensive use of altars and offerings. As a result of their wandering lifestyle, they were unable to retain or maintain even one of their traditional costumes. Tap, leap, close step, parallel tortilier, hop, stamp, slide, kick, mincing, and shuffling are the dance steps utilized. All their ritual dances are accompanied by the gimbar/gimbe-e and gong's percussive sound. All three ritual dances are characterized by dedication, reverence, and humility, which are expressed through the dance steps and arm and body movements. This choreographic history will instil in the youths an appreciation for our race's history, motivate our artists to be more active and engaged, and enlighten our society's cultural inclinations and beliefs.

Keywords: Mamanwa, Ritual Dance, Ethnographic, Dance Steps, Surigao del Sur, Philippines

Paper Id: 1520

Published On: 2022-05-27

Published In: Volume 10, Issue 3, May-June 2022

Cite This: Mamanwa Ritual Dances of Surigao del Sur - Nancy Marie M. Arimang - IJIRMPS Volume 10, Issue 3, May-June 2022. DOI 10.37082/IJIRMPS.2022.v10i03.004

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Dance: Rituals of Experience (3rd edn)

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Experience as Ritual

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People are born with organs of perception that provide the means of experiencing the world. These organs endow them with different senses as well as the sense of balance and of rotation. Movement is considered as a powerful influence that gives a mysterious force of embodiment that lets the body communicate its own body movement. Also, the definition of ideas and feelings merge in the spiritual body and is given to emphasize rituals as a symbolic transformation of experiences. A real definition of dance is given here and the chapter discusses why the Booger Dance is specifically talked about here.

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Anthropology Review

Dance as Ritual – an anthropological perspective

The rituals of a society are imbued with meaning and symbolism, and as such they are of great interest to anthropologists. Definitions of what constitutes a ritual vary, however there are some fundamental principles on which there is widespread consensus, namely that ritual behaviour is clearly distinct from day-to-day behaviour, and that it involves elements of the supernatural (Wu 2018).

Table of Contents

The Power of Ritual

ritual dance research paper

In the book The Forest of Symbols (1967) Turner defines ritual as follows – “by ‘ritual’ I mean prescribed formal behaviour for occasions not given over to technological routine, having reference to beliefs in mystical beings or powers.” Rituals bring people together and are at their core a mechanism that helps build the spirit of a community (Jones 2013), described as “the glue that holds social groups together” (Whitehouse, as cited in Jones 2013).

Arnold Van Gennep (as cited in Beeman 2018) described ritual as having three stages – (1) the preliminary stage where preparations for the ritual are made, (2) the liminality stage where social order is suspended and only the rules of the ritual apply, and (3) post-liminality where the group emerges from the ritual in a transformed state.

Victor Turner adopted these ritual stages and developed them further, describing the liminality stage as being a time of intense emotion and social bonding occurring within a context of sacredness, a phenomenon that he termed “communitas.”

The building of communities through Ritual and Dance

Research has shown that rituals are even more powerful at building community when they involve the social group in coordinated synchronized movement, creating a form of ‘‘muscle bonding’’ (McNeill as cited in Wiltermuth, Heath 2009).

This creates a highly charged and emotional atmosphere, described by Durkheim (1915) as “effervescence” and by Radcliffe-Browne (1922) as becoming ‘‘absorbed in the unified community’’ through dance.

Clearly this aligns with the abovementioned spirit of “communitas” that takes over during the liminality stage (Beeman 2018), forging a strong psychological bond between the participants that facilitates cooperation and decreases the probability of undesirable behaviour (Wiltermuth, Heath 2009).

The Zār healing dance ritual

In this essay I will be looking at the Iranian version of the Zār healing dance ritual performed in some regions of Northern and Eastern Africa and the Persian Gulf, as well as the Medicine Dance of the ǃKung Bushmen from the Nyae Nyae region in South West Africa, showing how they

(1) consist of behaviours that are specific to the ritual and not day-to-day behaviour,

(2) involve the supernatural,

(3) follow the three stages of ritual as originally defined by Van Gennep and

(4) create a strong feeling of “communitas” during the liminality stage as defined by Turner.

The Zār ritual is performed slightly differently in different countries, however wherever it is practised it retains its core function as a therapeutic exercise for people struggling with mental illnesses such as depression or anxiety, as well as women suffering from emotional disturbances resulting from infidelity or infertility (Mianji, Semnani 2015).

The ritual dance

The version of Zār practiced in Iran is based on the belief that patients who have not been healed by traditional doctors are possessed by an evil spirit called a “bād” (which means “wind”). People afflicted with such disturbances seek out a bābā or a māmā, experienced Zār practitioners who will assess their symptoms and decide whether the healing ritual can help them.

If yes, payment is negotiated and the preliminary stage of the ritual begins, where the patient is isolated from the community for several days, while the bābā or māmā prepares them by anointing them with herbs and unguents, tying their big toes together with goat hairs and threatening the evil spirit with a bamboo stick. When this phase is complete, the patient is ready and the ritual proceeds to the liminality stage (Beeman 2018).

Drummers and dancers (Ahl-e Havā: people also possessed by a bād who were treated by the māmā or bābā who organized the ceremony) are summoned, and the patient is laid on the floor in the middle of the room with a cloth covering his or her head.

Dance Ritual - the Zar healing dance

The Zār practitioner starts chanting and changing the rhythm of the music until the patient starts to twitch, which is taken as a sign that the evil spirit has been identified. At this point the Ahl-e Havā start to dance, moving rhythmically and breathing to the beat of the drums. This leads to them falling into a state of trance through autohypnosis (Erickson, as cited in Haley, Richeport-Haley 2015), aided by the fact that the room becomes very hot and airless, with windows and doors closed and incense and perfume wafting through the air.

The atmosphere becomes highly charged, fostering “an intense sense of social bonding, togetherness and social unity” (Turner 1967), with dancers and Zār practitioners falling to the ground or dancing in an uncontrolled frenzy, taken over by the evil spirits that are attached to them. The spirit that has possessed the patient then makes its demands, which are satisfied, and the affliction is alleviated (Beeman 2018).

After the ceremony, in the post-liminality stage, the patient is re-integrated into society and any previous antisocial behaviour is excused as having resulted from the possession of the evil spirit (Mianji, Semnani 2015).

The afflicted patient is “reborn” as a member of Ahl-e Havā, thus becoming part of a supportive community. From that day onwards the new Ahl-e Havā will have his or her own annual Zār healing ceremony, but perhaps more importantly they will also have to attend other Zār ceremonies to dance with their new community. Seeing as Zār groups usually number between thirty and a hundred members, the recruit finds himself or herself with a packed social calendar consisting of what is essential ritualized group therapy sessions (Kennedy 1967).

It is evident from the above that the Zār dance meets all the criteria of a ritual as defined at the beginning of this essay, namely it

(1) has its own rules and procedures that are totally separate from day-to-day behaviour,

(2) relates to “the demonic powers of evil” (Kennedy 1967) and hence the supernatural,

(3) follows the three stages of ritual, with the bābā or māmā going through several preparatory procedures, then an intense liminality stage with a very strong feeling of communitas and finally a post-liminality stage where the afflicted patient emerges transformed as a member of the Ahl-e Havā community.The !Kung bushmen – healing through dance ritual

The second case study I will be referring to relates to the medicine dance of the !Kung bushmen, which brings together an entire tribe in a communal, synchronised dance held to protect them from disease and death, and to cure those who are already sick or are about to become sick without even knowing it yet (Marshall 1969).

The !Kung worship the god Gau N!a , who wields power over a host of lesser gods called //Gauwa , and //Gauwa-si , which are the spirits of the dead.  The //Gauwa , and //Gauwa-si are unleashed on the world of men, bringing with them both good and evil, in the form of sickness and death. The medicine men in the tribe have a supernatural power called n/um , which enables them to communicate with the spirits and cure the tribe (Marshall 1962).

The !Kung medicine dance – ritual healing

The first stage of the medicine dance consists of the women building a fire and sitting around it in a tight circle, singing the medicine songs and clapping to the rhythm. This preliminary stage takes several hours and is critical for the ritual to be effective, because the medicine songs activate the n/um in the hearts of the medicine men and heats it up, making it much more potent.

While the women are preparing, the men get ready by strapping rattles onto their legs. The young men then make a grand entrance, dancing in pairs towards the women with exaggerated gestures and lots of loud stomping and rattling.

They are then joined by the older men, and they form a line and dance around the singing women. The women sing different songs, with names such as the “Rain dance” or “Giraffe dance” but the dance steps performed by the men never vary.

They all repeat the same basic steps, with small movements, their torsos hardly moving and their main focus on stamping their feet and shaking the rattles, in order to echo the clapping of the women and match their tempo.

As they go round and round their feet and dig a groove in the soil, which gets deeper and deeper as they dance round and round in the same circle. The men also heat their n/um by picking up coal and running into the fire (Marshall 1962).

After a couple of hours the n/um “boils up their spinal columns into their heads” (Marshall 1969) and one after the other the medicine men fall into a trance, heralding the liminality stage, where the normal rules of dealing with the gods and spirits no longer apply.

The singing and clapping increases in volume and intensity, and the dancing men start “drawing the sickness” out of the sick person for whom the ritual is being held, and out of the community (Marshall 1962).

The medicine men stand over the sick, fluttering their hands to draw the sickness out of the afflicted person and pull it into the medicine man himself. The sickness passes through the medicine man, burning his body as it travels to his head, where he finally ejects it by shaking his head vigorously and emitting loud shrieks to throw the ailment as far away as possible.

Caution is thrown to the wind and the men call out to the //Gauwa , and //Gauwa-si, at first interceding on behalf of the tribe and pleading with them to show mercy. If the spirits refuse, the medicine men become aggressive, cursing the evil spirits while screaming and throwing sticks and stones at the shadows, to drive the //Gauwa , and //Gauwa-si away and protect the tribe (Marshall 1969). 

After battling the evil spirits and drawing out sickness, the medicine men collapse into a state of unconsciousness the !Kung call “half-death” (Marshall 1962). During this post-liminal stage, it is believed that the medicine man’s spirit leaves his body and communes with the //Gauwa , and //Gauwa-si.

The other participants in the ritual work together to call back the spirit to the man’s body, with the women singing as loud as possible and the other medicine men performing curings over his body, until his spirit finally returns from its encounter with //Gauwa , and //Gauwa-si and the man regains consciousness (Marshall 1969). 

As was the case for the Zār dance, the medicine dance of the !Kung bushmen also meets the various criteria pertaining to ritual.

(1) The ritual requires special behaviours and procedures that are specific to the dance and not part of day-to-day behaviour.

(2) The !Kung have a complex system of beliefs and the ritual is aimed at interacting with lesser gods and spirits, protecting the tribe from the sickness and death resulting from the supernatural.

(3) The medicine dance follows the three stages of ritual as originally defined by Van Gennep and

(4) it fosters as strong sense of communitas, with Marshall (1969) telling us that “In their singing, clapping and dancing the people are united and are in active vigorous participation with the medicine men for their mutual good. This benefits the !Kung by reducing social tensions.”

Conclusion – the power of ritual and dance

In conclusion, it is clear that rituals are critical to bring together societies and hold them together over time. Furthermore, incorporating synchronised movement and dance in the ritual makes it even more powerful in generating strong community ties, so much so that it has even been proposed as a differentiator in societal evolution , with groups who practice such rituals surviving for longer than groups that do not.  (Wiltermuth, Heath 2009). 

This explains why anthropologists have focused on dance as a ritual, because it is a means of understanding how human groups come together, and stay together, forming the bedrock of civilisation (Jones 2013).

Bibliography

Alcorta, C.S. and Sosis, R., 2005. Ritual, emotion, and sacred symbols: The evolution of religion as an adaptive complex.  Human nature (Hawthorne, N.Y.); Hum Nat,  16 (4), pp. 323-359.

Beeman, W.O., 2018. Understanding the Zār: An African-Iranian Healing Dance Ritual.  Anthropology of the Middle East,  13 (1), pp. 69.

De Largy Healy, J., 2017. ‘This Painting Becomes His Body for Life’: Transforming Relations in Yolŋu Initiation and Funeral Rituals.  Anthropological forum,  27 (1), pp. 18-33.

Durkheim, E. (1965). The elementary forms of the religious life (J.W.Swain, Trans.). New York: Free Press. (Original work published 1915)

Geertz , C.,  Negara: The Theatre State in Nineteenth-Century Bali.  Princeton, NJ: Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Haley, J. and Richeport-Haley, M., 2015. Autohypnosis and Trance Dance in Bali.  International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis; Int J Clin Exp Hypn,  63 (4), pp. 455-468.

Handelman, D., 2004. Introduction: Why Ritual in Its Own Right? How So?  Social analysis,  48 (2), pp. 1-32.

Jones, D., 2013. The ritual animal: praying, fighting, dancing, chanting–human rituals could illuminate the growth of community and the origins of civilization.  Nature (London),  493 (7433), pp. 470.

Kaeppler, A.L., 2010. Interpreting Ritual as Performance and Theory Association for Social Anthropology in Oceania 2010 Distinguished Lecture.  Oceania; Oceania,  80 (3), pp. 263-271.

Keeney, B. and Keeney, H., 2013. Reentry Into First Creation: A Contextual Frame for the Ju/’hoan Bushman Performance of Puberty Rites, Storytelling, and Healing Dance.  Journal of anthropological research,  69 (1), pp. 65-86.

Keeney, H., Keeney, B. and BOO, K., 2016. The “trance dance” of the Ju/’hoan Bushmen (San) of Southern Africa: implications for hypnotic means of healing.  International journal of health promotion and education,  54 (3), pp. 137-144.

Kennedy, J.G., 1967. Nubian Zār Ceremonies as Psychotherapy.  Human organization,  26 (4), pp. 185-194.

Kinahan, J., 2017. The Dancing Kudu: women’s initiation in the Namib Desert during the second millennium AD.  Antiquity; Antiquity,  91 (358), pp. 1043-1057.

Marshall, L., 1969. The Medicine Dance of the !Kung Bushmen.  Africa (London.1928),  39 (4), pp. 347-381.

Marshall, L., 1962. Kung Bushman Religious Beliefs.  Africa (London.1928),  32 (3), pp. 221-252.

Mianji, F. and Semnani, Y., 2015. Zār Spirit Possession in Iran and African Countries: Group Distress, Culture-Bound Syndrome or Cultural Concept of Distress?  Iranian journal of psychiatry; Iran J Psychiatry,  10 (4), pp. 225-232.

Radcliffe-Brown, A.R. (1922). The Andaman Islanders. New York:Free Press.

Wiltermuth, S.S. and Heath, C., 2009. Synchrony and Cooperation.  Psychological science; Psychol Sci,  20 (1), pp. 1-5.

Wu, Q., 2018. The structure of ritual and the epistemological approach to ritual study.  The journal of Chinese sociology ,  5 (1), pp. 1-19.

ritual dance research paper

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  6. Program group dance## Sangam dance Research Center ##

COMMENTS

  1. DYANGGO AND SAMBALI RITUAL DANCES OF CAGAYAN: AN ANALYSIS

    Tuguegarao City, Cagayan. Abstract: This study documented and analyzed two unpublished ritual Cagayan dances. In pursuance of this task, the Samb ali and Dyanggo dances w ere docume nted, their ...

  2. PDF Ritual Dances: The Case of a Manobo Tribe in Cantilan, Surigao Del Sur

    ABSTRACT: This ethnographic research involves the Manobo's ritual dances of Surigao del Sur. It relied on observations, analytical description and qualitative judgment or interpretation to obtain a picture of the Manobo ... The ritual dance equipment used during the performance was "bangkaso" or altar, "apog" or powderized shells ...

  3. PDF Ritual Dance and Modernisation

    RITUAL DANCE AND "MODERNISATION": THE TIWI EXAMPLE By Andree Grau Introduction For most people carrying out research in ritual and traditional dance forms, 'modernisation', usually understood as 'Westernisation', is seen as something destructive. Often rituals are studied as fairly static phenomena. ... In this paper my discussion will be two ...

  4. (PDF) Dancing With the Spirits: Observations on the conduct of Basal

    "Taruk," a ritual dance, was performed during the visit. It is a dance that is performed by the Pala'wan indigenous People Group. ... In this paper, a roadmap for future research and extension ...

  5. The Future of Ritual

    Abstract. As the new century starts at the time when dance achieved the rites of the ancient ancestry, something ever new and ever old has emerged. Because of the birth of new innovative ways of dancing, dance was still able to win a large, popular audience; a new rebellion began among the young. This was also the time when, some of the most ...

  6. PDF DYANGGO AND SAMBALI RITUAL DANCES OF CAGAYAN: AN ANALYSIS

    The qualitative research design was used by the researcher in gathering data for the study. The researcher made an in-depth observation and key information interview about the unpublished ritual ...

  7. (PDF) Indigenous Dance Rituals of the Philippines in the 1970s: An

    Through my research I found the sincerity and beauty of such rituals inspired me to create my own dance, celebrating life similarly in my own secular world. Their world shaped my own! BROLGA 37 46 Contributors HAHNA BRIGGS is a Dunedin based dance practitioner with particular interests in improvisation, and community, contemporary and ...

  8. [Pdf] Tubong/Putong in Marinduque As a Ritual-dance of Healing

    As a preliminary project using the disciplines of anthropology, ritual, and dance, this paper investigates the coronation ritual tubong/putong practiced in Marinduque, Philippines. I build my methodological inquiry through the existing Philippine dance research methods borrowed from ethnochoreology and anthropology. In exploring tubong as a ritual-dance of healing, thanksgiving, and veneration ...

  9. Filipino Folk Dance in the Academy: Embodied Research in the Work of

    This article addresses the work of researchers Francesca Reyes Aquino, Sally Ann Ness, and Benildanze, all of whom use embodied practices to study Filipino folk dance in the academy but with divergent methodologies: Aquino uses ethnography, Ness phenomenology, and Benildanze practice as research. It examines the processes by which dances have moved from functioning rituals to representative ...

  10. Art, Ritual, and Folklore: Dance and Cultural Identity among the

    Academia.edu is a platform for academics to share research papers. Art, Ritual, and Folklore: Dance and Cultural Identity among the Peoples of the Casamance ... In Cusco, Peru, the members of ritual dance associations called comparsus and of in-stituciones c&wales ('cultural institutions') embody and give expression to many specific referents ...

  11. Mamanwa Ritual Dances of Surigao del Sur

    Mamanwa ritual dances do not only define but also, more importantly, direct the choreographic ideas and history of the Mamanwas. The purpose of this ethnographic study was to ascertain the fundamental characteristics of Mamanwa ritual dances in terms of their nature, clothing, accessories and equipment, dance patterns, musical accompaniment, tempo, and the cultural values expressed in each ...

  12. ritual dance Latest Research Papers

    Find the latest published documents for ritual dance, Related hot topics, top authors, the most cited documents, and related journals

  13. Ritual Dances of the T'Boli

    The study investigated the dances and rituals of the T'boli's of Lake Sebu, South Cotabato. The respondents were the T'boli tribal dancers. The study used the qualitative research design involving ethnographic technique. The study found that the dances show the T'boli's affinity with nature. The unique dance movement is characterized by: heads bowed low; arms extended sideward and ...

  14. History as Ritual

    Dance was originally seen as an ideal medium for the expression of the mysticism of Christianity. However, the church frowned upon dancing and this chapter explains why. The chapter features the different dances formulated in the middle of the history of dance talked about here and the time dance came back to its ritualistic way of expression.

  15. Experience as Ritual

    Movement is considered as a powerful influence that gives a mysterious force of embodiment that lets the body communicate its own body movement. Also, the definition of ideas and feelings merge in the spiritual body and is given to emphasize rituals as a symbolic transformation of experiences. A real definition of dance is given here and the ...

  16. PDF Tribal Dances

    This paper also discussed the different types of tribal dances ... Funeral Dance, family or community ritual Dance)- Thali Vadan in Thane District perform by Mahadev Koli tribes , in Pavara ...

  17. Dance as Ritual

    It is evident from the above that the Zār dance meets all the criteria of a ritual as defined at the beginning of this essay, namely it. (1) has its own rules and procedures that are totally separate from day-to-day behaviour, (2) relates to "the demonic powers of evil" (Kennedy 1967) and hence the supernatural, (3) follows the three ...

  18. Philippine Dance Research Papers

    In this paper, I argue for movement knowledge competence because rituals, movement practices, dance traditions, or whatever term is possible, are part and parcel of indigenous knowledge and local traditions. In this case, I suggest that the tubong ritual-dance carries a particular set of movement and dance knowledge.

  19. Dance Research Methodologies Ethics, Orientations, and Practices

    Dance Research Methodologies: Ethics, Orientations, and Practices captures the breadth of methodological approaches to research in dance in the fine arts, the humanities, the social sciences, and the natural sciences by bringing together researchers from around the world writing about a variety of dance forms and practices.. This book makes explicit the implicit skills and experiences at work ...

  20. Examining Ritual in Dance/Movement Therapy

    Ritual practices have long been a part of numerous cultures' history as mind-body actions performed for healing. Modern day rituals can be observed in baptisms, weddings, or funerals. Rituals have also been adapted into various psychotherapy approaches as effective, time-limited transformative additions through Van Gennep's transition phases among varying populations. Ritual and dance ...

  21. Zimbabwean Indigenous Dance Research: A Reflection on the Past and

    This article attempts to give an overview of the past and present approaches and scope to the study of Zimbabwean indigenous dances. The academic study of Zimbabwean indigenous dances is assumed to be largely under the jurisdiction of disciplines such as ethnomusicology, musicology and anthropology. Little or no attempt has been made to study indigenous dances in Zimbabwe from an ...

  22. PDF Ritual, Myth and Tragedy: Origins of Theatre in Dionysian Rites

    Ritual, myth and tragedy dance—all the limbs moving to the rhythm. And then the other symbolic powers grow, those of music, rhythm, dynamics, and harmony—all with sudden spontaneity (Nietzche ...

  23. Morris dancing, mumming plays, ritual dance Research Papers

    View Morris dancing, mumming plays, ritual dance Research Papers on Academia.edu for free.