Encyclopedia of Religion

(Darren Dugan) #1
IMAGES AND THE BODY

ENCYCLOPEDIA OF RELIGION, SECOND EDITION

or ancestral spirits into the very body of the participant.
On the island of New Zealand, richly carved objects were
used to attend to other aspects of the body. A carved
wooden bar, called paepae (f ), may have been part of the
ritualizing of excreting waste. It has been suggested that
such a device was bitten by someone using a latrine as the
final act of elimination, providing a cleansing of taboo
caused by excretion. The Maori also used another type
of carved device, the feeding funnel (g). It was forbidden
for food to touch the lips of chiefs while they healed from
the application of tattoos. The feeding funnel allowed the
chief to eat semi-liquid food. The elaborately tattooed
faces on the outside of the funnel may correspond to the
power the funnel seeks to preserve in the tattooed face of
the chief who ate with the funnel.

(f ) TOP. A paepae of carved wood and haliotis shell, New Zea-
land. [Masco Collection; photograph by Dirk Baker] (g) LEFT. A
Maori feeding funnel (koropata) of carved wood and haliotis
shell, New Zealand. [Masco Collection; photograph by Dirk Baker]

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