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Crying Shame: Metaculture, Modernity, and the Exaggerated Death of Lament
 
 
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Crying Shame: Metaculture, Modernity, and the Exaggerated Death of Lament [Hardcover]

James M. Wilce (Author)

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Book Description

1405169923 978-1405169929 December 2, 2008 1
Building on ethnographic fieldwork and extensive historical evidence, Crying Shame analyzes lament across thousands of years and nearly every continent.
  • Explores the enduring power of lament: expressing grief through crying songs, often in a collective ritual context
  • Draws on the author’s extensive ethnographic fieldwork, and unique long-term engagement and participation in the phenomenon
  • Offers a startling new perspective on the nature of modernity and postmodernity
  • An important addition to growing literature on cultural globalization

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"James Wilce's new book is a stunning attempt to present lament as it currently exists cross-culturally." (Journal of Folklore Research, 21 September 2011)

 

Review

Wilce's book is fascinating for the range of cultures it considers--from ancient Greece and pharaonic Egypt to rural Bangladesh and Finland. Especially appealing are Wilce's dazzling and creative conjunctions (such as Phil Spector's American pop-cultural "wall of sound" as a way of appreciating polyphonic funerary laments of the Amazonian rain forest). Wilce's personal and scholarly engagement with the material successfully conveys the nostalgia for emotional authenticity and the longing for fully-lived life that haunt present-day globalized societies.
David Pinault, author of Notes from the Fortune-Telling Parrot: Islam and the Struggle for Religious Pluralism in Pakistan

Crying Shame brings a broad range of scholarship to bear on the subject of lament. Wilce not only offers a brilliant synthesis of past and present scholarship, but argues persuasively for the continuity of lament in new and surprising forms.
Gail Holst-Warhaft, Cornell University

In this beautifully written work, alternately rueful and ironically twinkling, Jim Wilce trains a laser-beam of attention on a specific topic—the loss of lament—that turns out to contain worlds. I can think of no recent book that offers so insightful an overview of both traditional and postmodern aspects of culture in the modern, globalized context. It is also an exciting introduction to key theories and controversies in current anthropology and cultural studies.
Louis Sass, Professor of Clinical Psychology, Rutgers University

In Crying Shame James Wilce writes eloquently of lament practices as cultural performances that embody some of the deepest cross-currents of modernity and postmodernity. ...a unique combination of subtle analysis and global vision.
Geoffrey White, University of Hawai'i, Manoa


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
linking lament, texted weeping, spontaneous lament, lament performances, lament tradition, traditional lament, including lament, globalizing modernity, lament texts, shame spreads, lament genres, performance genres
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Locating Lament, Reviving Lament, Modern Vertigo, Lament Anyway, Middle East, Crying Backward, Mourning Becomes the Electron's Age, United States, John Chrysostom, Aili Nenola, Pirkko Fihlman, South Asia, Control of Lament, Martta Kuikka, Finnish Literature Society, Imam Husayn, Papua New Guinea, Sierra Leonean, Bendu Jabati, Ancient Culture Week, African Americans, Steve Feld, Song Dynasty, British Raj, World War
Browse Sample Pages:
Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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