Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)

The Garos, a tribal group who live in India (western highlands of Meghalaya and the southern foothills of Assam) and northern Bangladesh, are noted for their diverse beliefs on weretigers – that is, human beings with the ability of turning themselves, in various ways, into ferocious tigers and subse...

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Main Author: Francesco Brighenti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: James Cook University 2017-05-01
Series:eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3568
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spelling doaj-fc23ce393e01452990014f933c246c0a2021-09-16T01:44:37ZengJames Cook UniversityeTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics1448-29402017-05-01161Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)Francesco Brighenti0Independent Researcher, VeniceThe Garos, a tribal group who live in India (western highlands of Meghalaya and the southern foothills of Assam) and northern Bangladesh, are noted for their diverse beliefs on weretigers – that is, human beings with the ability of turning themselves, in various ways, into ferocious tigers and subsequently back to human form. The present paper provides a first attempt at classifying the different motifs in Garo weretiger-lore which include traditional beliefs of: (1) a legendary ‘race’ of monstrous tigermen ruled over by a Tiger Mother; (2) individuals endowed with a ‘dual’ vital principle inhabiting a human body during daytime and a tiger one at nighttime; and (3) shape-shifters who can physically metamorphose into tigers through magical arts. This classification highlights the rich variety of beliefs held by the Garos on these  quintessential liminal beings, and provides a critical analysis of the most frequently occurring class of werebeasts in the folktales, legends, and epics of tropical Asia.https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3568Garo ethnic groupweretigerslegendary tigermenmagical shape-shiftersanthropological study of dreamsnon-human animals’ cosubjectivity with human animals
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francesco Brighenti
spellingShingle Francesco Brighenti
Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)
eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
Garo ethnic group
weretigers
legendary tigermen
magical shape-shifters
anthropological study of dreams
non-human animals’ cosubjectivity with human animals
author_facet Francesco Brighenti
author_sort Francesco Brighenti
title Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)
title_short Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)
title_full Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)
title_fullStr Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)
title_full_unstemmed Traditional Beliefs About Weretigers Among the Garos of Meghalaya (India)
title_sort traditional beliefs about weretigers among the garos of meghalaya (india)
publisher James Cook University
series eTropic: electronic journal of studies in the tropics
issn 1448-2940
publishDate 2017-05-01
description The Garos, a tribal group who live in India (western highlands of Meghalaya and the southern foothills of Assam) and northern Bangladesh, are noted for their diverse beliefs on weretigers – that is, human beings with the ability of turning themselves, in various ways, into ferocious tigers and subsequently back to human form. The present paper provides a first attempt at classifying the different motifs in Garo weretiger-lore which include traditional beliefs of: (1) a legendary ‘race’ of monstrous tigermen ruled over by a Tiger Mother; (2) individuals endowed with a ‘dual’ vital principle inhabiting a human body during daytime and a tiger one at nighttime; and (3) shape-shifters who can physically metamorphose into tigers through magical arts. This classification highlights the rich variety of beliefs held by the Garos on these  quintessential liminal beings, and provides a critical analysis of the most frequently occurring class of werebeasts in the folktales, legends, and epics of tropical Asia.
topic Garo ethnic group
weretigers
legendary tigermen
magical shape-shifters
anthropological study of dreams
non-human animals’ cosubjectivity with human animals
url https://journals.jcu.edu.au/etropic/article/view/3568
work_keys_str_mv AT francescobrighenti traditionalbeliefsaboutweretigersamongthegarosofmeghalayaindia
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