Document Type

Conference Item

Publication Date

1-1-2006

Abstract

Mag-igal (dancing) and Igal-Jin (dancing spirit bearer) are the liminal performative components of Magduwata, a healing ritual ceremony of the Bajau Kubang people in Semporna, East Malaysia. This paper will focus on the liminality of Magduwata ceremony of the Bajau Kubang from Bumbum Islands in Semporna through trance dancing (Mag-igal and Igal-Jin) at the conclusion ofthe ancestral-derived healing ceremony. The Magduwata ritual healing represents a classic example of Turner's 'social drama' where unexplained sickness among family members is regarded as a breach in the physical and metaphysical relationship of the living and the ancestral spirits. Hence, crisis that emerges from this breach is moderated through the regressive action of the spirit bearers (Jin) who performs the Igal (dance) with the immediate family members dancing (Mag-igal) to reintegrate spiritual and physical balance. Performativity (where performance is floated freely) in Magduwata as ritual participants perform within the matrix of space and audience, liminalises the constructs of hierarchy within the social structure of the Bajau Kubang's family, altering time and space that is not part of the legal convention (something that is extra legal) that happens outside the familiar. It is both strange and estrange. Hence, dancing (Mag-igal) by participants and dancing-spirit-bearer (Igal-Jin) is both a 'social drama' in the Turnerian sense as well as a liminal event in the performative sense. This paper will be presented in two parts. The first part illustrates the narratives ofritual constructs while the second part discusses the ensemble of 'social drama' and its liminal' structure, which is metamorphosised through dancing or Mag-igal.

Keywords

Mag-igal, Igal-Jin, Bajau Kubang, Semporna, Musical pieces

Divisions

arts

Event Title

24th ICTM Study Group on Ethnochoreology Symposium

Event Location

Cluj, Romania

Event Dates

10-16 July 2006

Event Type

conference

Additional Information

Conference paper-Cultural centre

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