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Introduction
Headhunting is one of those customs which was almost certain to attract a great
deal of attention from early western observers because it fits so well with the west-
ern world’s fantasies regarding the savagery of primitive life. One is tempted to
believe that the discovery of this custom was immediately welcomed by the various
Euro-American colonial powers of the last two centuries as living proof that there
were indeed genuine blood thirsty savages in their tropical possessions. Any linger-
ing doubts on this point were easily dispelled by the mere price of admission to an
occasional traveling circus where a “Wild Man of Borneo” was certain to appear
among the side show attractions. And if headhunters they were, then quite clearly
such wayward members of the human species were in sad need of the civilizing
influences of both Christianity and mercantilism.
It was in this ethnocentric climate of missionizing zeal, colonial domination,
and, I must add, with the decided advantage of superior fire power, that an ad-
venturer like the first Rajah Brooke of Sarawak could be acclaimed as a champion
Editors’ note: This article is a reprint of McKinley, Robert. 1976. “Human and proud of
it! A structural treatment of headhunting rites and the social definition of enemies.”
In Studies in Borneo societies: Social process and anthropological explanation, edited by
G. N. Appell, 92–126. DeKalb, IL: The Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Northern
Illinois University. The appendix, containing reflections on a debate between J. van
Baal and the author, was written for publication in Hau. We are grateful to the author
for permission to reprint this article.
of civilization, the perfect hero for British school boys. Ultimately, he and other
administrators like him did succeed in ending headhunting raids; although there
were times, no doubt, when it would have been rather difficult to distinguish be-
tween such raids themselves and some of the punitive expeditions meant to stop
them. By 1930 headhunting as an active pursuit survived in only a few corners of
the entire region from Northeast India to Melanesia, a region in which it is quite
possible that a third or more of the tribal groups had been practicing this type of
warfare at the time of European contact.
Of current interest is the fact that though headhunting has been made obsolete
as a mode of warfare, many groups continue to perform the rituals which were
once associated with it. In many parts of Borneo head feasts are still held and the
songs of ancient heroes are still sung. The only difference is that now the rites are
performed over relics of the past, old skulls taken long ago rather than fresh ones
from a recent raid. Some groups even use coconuts or wooden carvings as substi-
tutes for trophy heads.
The original purpose of a head feast was to install or incorporate into a vil-
lage the severed heads of enemies slain on a recent war raid. This chapter seeks to
determine the underlying structure and meaning of some of these rituals. What
symbolic messages did they carry? Why were they so often considered essential
to tribal well-being? Finally, what is so special about the head itself in its role as a
ritual symbol?
The following headings and comments provide a fairly close outline of the argu-
ments contained in this chapter.
1. Introduction
2. Asking the right questions
3. Aims and assumptions
The central question of why enemy heads should be treated as ritual
objects is raised. The answer cannot be derived until much later in
the chapter, but the contention is made that such a derivation must
be guided by a theory which claims that the meanings of all ritual
symbols are largely social in nature.
4. The native view
While native theories of headhunting are essential to any analysis of
the custom, we find that they give no direct answer to the original
question of why enemy heads should be selected as ritual objects.
Instead, headhunting myths point to other matters of religious
concern. Important among these is an implicit equation between war
raids and cosmic journeys.
5. Inferences from tribal cosmology
Since head hunts are mythically equated with cosmic journeys, a
summary of Southeast Asian tribal cosmology is presented.
6. Implications of this cosmology
The cosmological remoteness of enemies which is almost always
indicated in the myths is shown to be consistent with the relatively
Perhaps the most revealing discussion showing the discrepancy between the
meaning of headhunting for the western observer and its meaning to some of the
people who actually practiced it was presented by William Henry Furness (1902: 59)
in his account of a visit with a Kayan chief on the Baram River. The following dia-
logue may read contrived, but I submit it as an indicator of the picture we might get
if a fuller testimony were available:
“O Sabilah (Blood-brother) why is it that all you people of Kalamantan
kill each other and hang up these heads? In the land I come from such a
thing is never known; I fear that it would be ill-spoken of there, indeed
perhaps, thought quite horrible. What does Aban Avit think of it?” He
turned to me in utter, absolute surprise, at first with eyes half closed, as
doubting that he heard aright, and letting the smoke curl slowly out of
his mouth for a moment, he then replied, with unwonted vehemence:
— “No, Tuan! No the custom is not horrible. It is an ancient custom,
a good, beneficient custom, bequeathed to us by our fathers and our
fathers’ fathers; it brings us blessings, plentiful harvests, and keeps off
sickness, and pains. Those who were once our enemies, hereby become
our guardians, our friends, our benefactors.” “But,” I interrupted, “how
does Aban Avit know that these dried heads do all this? Don’t you make it
an excuse just because you like to shed blood and to kill?” “Ah, Tuan, you
whitemen had no great Chief, like Tokong, to show you what was right;
haven’t you ever heard the story of Tokong and his people?” (Furness
1902: 59)
Furness continues to tell the story of Tokong and his people. It is a story in which
the hero Tokong is advised by a frog to cut off the heads of his enemies. At first
Tokong finds this a very repulsive idea and does not heed the frog’s advice. As a
consequence, although Tokong’s men are successful in battle, their village suffers
badly from famine, disease, and infertility. Finally, he decides to obey the frog, and
sure enough, the crops in the fields undergo a miraculous growth, house shingles
refurbish themselves, the people themselves look younger and healthier, babies are
conceived, and, most remarkable of all, canoes paddle themselves and rice pound-
ers work under their own power. The interesting point about the story is its empha-
sis on the fact that killing one’s enemies is not enough. It is the acquisition of the
heads and not victory alone which offers mystical benefits.
While the present chapter is in no way intended as an apology for headhunting,
it does insist that ritual symbols as well as native theories about them be allowed to
speak for themselves in order that we might better interpret their social relevance.
The conclusion to be derived below is that, in a sense, Aban Avit was right in what
he said in the dialogue quoted above. He was able to tell something about head-
hunting which has nearly always eluded foreign observers. He saw that the ritual
treatment of the heads was a community’s way of saying to itself: “Those who were
once our enemies, hereby become our guardians, our friends, our benefactors.”
The methods which I have used in supporting this conclusion may seem overly
comparative for a study which purports to be a structural analysis of a single sys-
tem of meanings. I have drawn upon myths and rituals from a number of sepa-
rate ethnographic contexts. In defense of this method I can say two things. First,
most of my examples come from Southeast Asia or Oceania, where, prior to the
formation of the state on the mainland (around 200 ad) and in the Indonesian
islands (around 350 ad), the custom of headhunting may have had a near continu-
ous distribution. So within this broad region I may actually be dealing with a single
tradition. Second, I think it is necessary when studying a single, though wide-
spread ritual form, such as that of incorporating enemy heads into a community,
that we pay full attention to as many variations as possible. Since all the variations
are attempts to deal with the same ritual problem (in this case the problem of mak-
ing the external enemy an internal friend), it takes many versions to show us the
full dimensions of the problem itself. In this way I have approached headhunting
ritual and myth in much the same way as Lévi-Strauss (1969) approaches mythol-
ogy in general; that is, by examining many variations of a single form, and without
claiming that any one version is the “true” form. Since the problems dealt with in
mythology often are among the most contradictory aspects of our existence, they
are not easily resolved by any single version of the myths about them, nor by a
few symbolic mediations. Rather such problems seem to call for many repeated
assaults of meaning. In fact such problems can never be entirely disposed of by
myth. They can, however, be pushed around a bit here and there, and thus they can
be placed in more convenient positions vis-à-vis the particular meaning system of
any given society.
Since the central problem of a myth must be worked out through variations, it
is the variations which, upon analysis, can often give us the clearest picture of the
structure of the myth. I would say that this is sometimes as true for ritual as it is for
myth. I believe that headhunting ritual is such a case. Headhunting, as a complex of
myth and ritual, seems to be much concerned with how to manage the existential
limits of the social world. This concern involves symbolic modes of placing the
secure inner world of community life in an acceptable relation to such unending
contradictions as those between life and death, familiar and foreign, culture and
nature, and friend and enemy. Naturally, no single version of the ritual complex
in question has achieved a total resolution of these problems. But by examining a
number of attempted solutions, I believe we are better able to discern some pattern
to the problem itself.
Implicit in all this is the notion that ritual symbols are not selected in an arbi-
trary way, but that they are chosen for their symbolic appropriateness to the ritual
contexts in which they are employed. There is some irony in this because the pri-
mary symbol which allows humans to communicate their ideas to one another is
the “word” that is based on man’s unique capacity arbitrarily to bestow meaning
onto clusters of sound produced by the organs of speech. So the word, which is
the primary symbol, is based on a very arbitrary link between concepts and sound
structures. Yet ritual symbols, which are in a sense secondary symbols, are based
on direct links between concepts themselves and therefore stand in a much less
arbitrary relationship to each other. Said in another way there is always more logic
to metaphor than there is to nominalism. There should always be some logic to the
structural links which join a number of ritual symbols into a meaningful statement
about human experience with social reality. A structural analysis of ritual symbols
aims at uncovering this logic and then exploring the social relevance of the state-
ments made by a particular rite or ceremony.
Ritual symbols can be expressed either verbally or non-verbally, and as actions
or objects. Quite often concrete representations which we can for convenience call
“ritual objects” are able to convey the ideas to be expressed by a certain rite in a
far more powerful way than could words alone. There are probably many kinds
of socially relevant meanings which would have no impact on people if stated in a
prosaic speech, but which can have a profound effect when expressed through the
metaphorical idiom of concrete ritual symbols.
Because of this some serious attention must be paid to the various physical ob-
jects, whether products of nature or man-made artifacts, which are made to take
on the role of ritual symbols. Since such physical objects have fixed properties and
certain typical relationships with other objects and events, they quickly develop
standing relationships with the everyday system of meanings and categories held
by a society. Therefore all familiar physical objects are a bit like concepts them-
selves in that their selection as ritual symbols is not made on an arbitrary basis but
in terms of the ritual or symbolic appropriateness of the meanings already assigned
to or associated with them in everyday life. If these meanings are especially appro-
priate to the message and structure of a given ritual context then it is likely that the
object will be incorporated as a ritual symbol.
Thus it is that religions are always forced to borrow systematically from the mun-
dane world of familiar objects for the symbolic hardware with which they portray
the sacred. If we follow van Baal (1971: 1–8) in defining religion as a concern with
“a non-empirical reality” then it is clear that religion is dependent upon the selec-
tive use of items from empirical reality now transposed as ritual objects and sym-
bols to express its non-empirical conceptual content. Human history has seen ritual
treatment accorded to a very wide and heterogeneous assortment of things, any one
of which would appear fairly mundane when viewed in isolation. No extremes of
iconoclasm can escape this paradox of the need for concrete ritual symbols in reli-
gions. It is essential that such symbols be borrowed from the mundane sphere, and
it is by the logic of symbolic appropriateness that the selections are made.
This chapter will present an analysis of the symbolic appropriateness of one
such concrete symbol, namely the human head, as it occurred in certain ritual con-
texts which were either directly or indirectly related to headhunting warfare. It will
also deal with the social relevance of the meanings conveyed by these rites. Most of
all this presentation will focus on what these rites had to say about the social defi-
nition of enemies. The leading idea throughout the discussion will be that in the
concrete symbol of the head a categorical enemy as a special type of social person
can be ritually converted into a friend.
sky world and the underworld, but also in a more general sense the “after world”
or place of the dead.
For some excellent examples of stories built on this theme consider the following:
The Iban story of “Klieng’s War Raid to the Sky” (Perham 1896: 311–25). In this
1.
tale the hero Klieng is able through his great courage, cunning, and magic to
wage war “in the halved deep heavens.” His opponent is the cruel Tedai who has
captured the parents of the beautiful Kumang, whom Klieng seeks to marry. To
reach the heavens he must first go to the horizon where he receives help from
the wind spirit, Hantu Ribut. Also his men use the beak of a hornbill and the
wing feathers of a hawk to move up into the sky vault. Klieng succeeds in rescu-
ing Kumang’s parents. He then returns to earth, and marries Kumang. Klieng
was such a great headhunter that he boasts: “Every month I get a seed of the
nibong palm [i.e., an enemy head].”
2. The Iban myth of Siu (Gomes 1911: 278–300). In this tale a young hero becomes
lost from his companions while hunting birds with his blow pipe. Wandering
deep through the forest and then crossing some hills, he comes to the vast long-
house of the supreme sky deity, Singalang Burong. He is represented on earth
as a species of kite. Siu marries the deity’s youngest daughter, and they return to
earth. They have a son, Seragunting.
Later, after a quarrel in which Siu commits an offense against birds, his divine
wife leaves him to return to her village in the sky. Both Siu and Seragunting set
out to follow her. In one version of the myth they wear feather garments to get
to the heavens. During their visit to the upper-world, Singalang Burong teaches
young Seragunting about warfare, bird omens, and padi planting. Seragunting
gets practice by joining the bird deities in their war raids against enemies who
live on the horizon (Howell 1963: 97). He then returns to earth with his newly
acquired knowledge.
The Land Dayak myth of Kichapi (Geddes 1957). As a small boy, Kichapi was
3.
already mature and skilled enough to go out hunting. However, he gets lost in
the forest and is raised by a pair of giant ogres. While staying in their realm he
eats only raw food. Next he is sent to a powerful female shaman of the upper-
world who chops him up and cooks him. Skimming off the fat and ugly parts,
she remakes him into a very handsome young man. Although he is now the
perfect man, the old shaman gives him an orangutan skin to wear as a disguise
in the presence of humans.
The ogres then escort him to the second-year swidden fields on the outskirts
of the village where Gumiloh, a wise and beautiful girl, lives. She and her village
are at this time in mourning over the death of her father whose head had been
taken by Minyawi, their most feared enemy. Although Kichapi is still dressed
as an orangutan and has the terrifying ogres as companions, Gumiloh has the
wisdom to calmly and politely invite them into the village. Kichapi now has his
first cooked food after a year of wandering in the non-human realm.
As a guest Kichapi participates in the daily life of Gumiloh’s village. But in
addition he also makes a journey to the under-world where he makes love to
the daughter of the treacherous dragon king. He gets her to help him steal secret
magical charms from her father. Now he is ready to lead the war raid to avenge
Gumiloh’s father. The enemy, Minyawi, so it seems, was somewhat under the
protection of the under-world dragon. Of course Kichapi is successful; he re-
covers the father’s head, cuts off Minyawi’s, reveals his own true identity, con-
fronts several other fearsome adversaries, and finally returns to marry Gumiloh
and unite her village with his village of birth. Together they celebrate a huge
head feast.
The Baree-speaking Toradja myth of Tambuja (Downs 1955: 47–49). This hero
4.
avenges the death of his parents at the hands of a remote enemy from across the
sea. In some versions this enemy is located in the upper-world or is called “The
King of the Horizon.” So the Toradja headhunting hero must also journey to
other worlds. He follows the rainbow to reach the sky and may then be thrown
down into the underworld where he takes the heads of the enemy’s ghosts.
Meanwhile the severed head itself speaks to the warrior telling him what to do
with it for the head feast. A special feature of the Toradja myth seems to be that
in certain tales the daughter of the enemy is given the power to become small
and conceal herself in a flute carried along with the head. From here she gives
betel nut to the father. Then her presence is revealed to the warrior, and, after
the head feast is properly celebrated, they marry.
5. The two Ifugao myths: “Virgin Birth” and “Self-Beheaded” (Barton 1955: 46–96).
Both these myths are about the headhunting hero, Balitok, who encounters and
gains control over the under-world ghoul “Self-Beheaded.” In the “Virgin Birth”
story Balitok is conceived when a male sky deity named Mayingat descends
through the upstream region to the central region of earth. He impregnates
Balitok’s mother by giving her some betel to chew. At that time Balitok’s mother
is an unmarried young woman who has a reputation for being choosy for she
refuses all suitors and lovers. Her pregnancy raises a lot of talk about how she
must prefer men of distant regions, enemies no doubt. After Balitok is born, he
is raised by his maternal grandfather. They have no other kin, so young Balitok
takes a great deal of ridicule from other boys who like to compete with him.
One day in anger he kills one of these rivals. The kin of the dead boy want re-
venge, and Balitok and his grandfather are quite vulnerable alone. At this point
Balitok’s divine father steps in to rescue him by teaching him how to use magic
prior to warfare. In particular he learns the dances and types of omen-taking
which must be done prior to a headhunt. With this help Balitok prevails.
In the myth of the Self-Beheaded, Balitok realizes that his enemies in an-
other village are preparing to make war on him. So he journeys to the bottom of
the lake of the downstream region seeking some strong sorcery to aim at these
enemies. In the under-world he meets the stump-necked ghoul, Self-Beheaded.
As long as Balitok will give raw food to Self-Beheaded this unpleasant creature
will work for him against his enemies. A key fact to relate to this myth is that
the Ifugao held special rites over the beheaded corpses of their own villagers
fallen in ambush. Their spirits are implored to seek revenge against the outsid-
ers who brought about their untimely deaths. Meanwhile, the victors would try
to counteract this rite by imploring the heads, themselves, to turn their anger
against their own former kin. Thus, Balitok’s rapport with Self-Beheaded seems
to represent a general ability to subvert the war magic of his enemies. In an-
other Balitok myth, Wigan, the major sky deity and the patron of headhunters,
teaches Balitok to hold preparatory headhunting rites to ensure the ability to
overcome the loss of a dead relative through a successful revenge attack (Barton
1955: 207–09).
The Marind-anim pig totem myths (van Baal 1966: 211–12; 395–405). Nazr is
6.
the central figure in one of the Marind myths of the origin of headhunting. He
was a totem (dema) of the pig clan and could exist as either a wild boar or a
man. (The wild pig, by the way, is viewed by these people as strong and coura-
geous.) During the day he appeared to his covillagers as a man. But at night he
would go into their sago groves as a pig and devour their food. One night his
pig-self was trapped and later eaten in a big feast. Nazr himself, though, contin-
ued on to become a great wanderer confronting various demons.
Unlike the previous Indonesian headhunting heroes, he did not go to the
upper-world or under-world during the mythic era. Instead a powerful female
spirit named Sobra came down to him from the upper-world to be his wife.
She also taught him to hunt heads. He would build large war canoes to carry
him on journeys for this purpose. His travels took him to all the most distant
geographic areas known to the Marind. These areas were inhabited by people
regarded as semi-human and who were therefore also regarded as fair game for
headhunting.
In some of the mythic journeys of the Marind totemic figures we find that
events occur which are thought to be responsible for present geographic fea-
tures. For example, one island off the New Guinea coast is thought to be the
severed head of a mythical being. Allegedly it was this violent act which cut the
island off from the mainland. Its original place was along the eastern limits of
the Marind warring zone. From there it drifted west, following the course of the
sun. The totem beings, themselves, now live in the under-world. At night they
follow the course of the “night-time sun” moving from the west to east.
The sun apparently is associated with the head as a symbol. The acquisition
of heads from the extreme east and west regions is viewed as a way of reestab-
lishing, on a cosmic level, the living community’s sacred ties with these original
beings. Thus a headhunt is a suitable corollary to the large initiation and re-
newal ceremonies held in the village. At these ceremonies the totemic beings
reappear as masked dancers to reenact the creation drama, the primeval events
which even now have the power to make new men. Both the reappearance of the
original beings and the creation of new men at initiation and name-giving have,
in fact, been made dependent upon the acquisition of enemy heads from foreign
lands.
There are many more myths and tales involving headhunters which could be pre-
sented. But I stop with these six because they are sufficient to make clear the point
that in native mythologies there is a close parallel between the headhunting expe-
ditions of the legendary heroes and transits back and forth between distant and
unseen, even unearthly, parts of the universe. Since the singing and recital of these
tales normally accompanies the rituals which celebrate or, as in the case of the
Ifugao, help to bring about a successful headhunt, we can safely conclude that this
parallel in myth between the headhunting expedition and journeys to other worlds
is meant to be extended to the contemporary deeds of living warriors.
Further evidence for this extension, at least among the Bornean groups, seems
to be present in the fact that the formal war dress of a successful headhunter in-
cluded feathered war jackets and head dresses with the tail feathers of the hornbill
or the argus pheasant. In some cases helmets with hornbill beaks were attached to
them (see Roth 1896: Vol. 2, Chapter XX). The living warrior dresses with some of
the same items that helped carry Kleing and his men to the sky.
Other favored items such as tiger and leopard teeth used as ear ornaments and
the skins of various jungle animals worn as jackets appear to follow the theme of
the Land Dayak hero Kichapi. Kichapi became identified with the wild by wear-
ing an orangutan skin as a disguise and thereby gained some control over the wild
forces of the non-human world. It is implicit in the choice of the natural ornaments
which adorn the costume of the ideal headhunter that he is a man who can reach
beyond the world of everyday life in his home village. He can go beyond and bring
back some of the secrets and powers which belong to other spheres of the universe.
In the war costume this belief is implicit, while in the myths it is explicit.
This major fact of the native theory of headhunting is of great importance. It in-
forms us that headhunting bears the same relationship to tribal cosmology as does
shamanism. The shaman likewise makes transcendent journeys from one realm to
the next whenever he or she seeks to track down and lure back the fleeting soul of
a person weakened by illness. But in the case of the shaman, it is more obvious that
this is a religious act. For the shaman goes into a trance and is visited by spirits. To
accompany this trance experience, the shaman recites long chants which narrate
the eventful journey of his or her own soul or spirit guide as it goes through the far
away realms and into the beyond. The highly subjective and mystical nature of the
shaman’s journey causes us to recognize almost immediately its religious character.
On the other hand, the objective and empirical nature of the living headhunter’s
journey tends to obscure the fact that it too has this same religious character, when
viewed from the perspective of native mythology.
At first we are tempted to say that the shaman is a religious practitioner, because
his journeys are purely symbolic; while the headhunter appears only as a warrior,
because his expeditions are real (in an empirical sense), However, when a head has
been taken and a head feast is held, we find that the headhunt is ritually re-enacted.
Chants are sung long into the night inviting the deities and the ancestors to be pres-
ent for the festivities. It is hoped they will bring blessings. Myths are then told which
link the recent headhunt with those more fabulous ones of the past. At this point
the empirical gap between the warrior and the religious practitioner begins to nar-
row. Ultimately, we must recognize that this parallel between the shaman and the
headhunter is a firm one. In a sense the headhunter is but a shaman on the march.
This is so much the case that we find stories such as the Kenyah Dayak tale of
the warrior Balan Nyaring’s expedition to Alo Malau, the Kenyah after-world lo-
cated along a great river in the sky (Galvin 1970). He went there because his young
wife, Bungan Lisu Lasuan, had died from loss of blood after pricking herself with
a needle during a period when all work such as sewing and embroidery was taboo.
She had taken up her needle work in violation of the taboo, which is why her ac-
cident had such dire consequences. It was Balan Nyaring’s aim to go to the land of
the dead to rescue her spirit and bring her back to life. To do this he had to climb
to the heavens on stairs. He fashioned these by shooting blow gun darts into the
sky vault so that each dart stuck into the butt of the one that preceded it. Once into
Alo Malau, Balan Nyaring successfully did battle with the warriors of that region
and cut off their heads. The fascinating thing about this story is that in this case of
someone who had died, it took a headhunter to do the work of a shaman, namely to
recover another person’s spirit or soul. We might note that this link between head-
hunting and concern with the dead, which is so apparent in the present example,
goes very deep. Often it appears in the requirement that heads be taken in order to
avenge deaths or to end mourning periods. This matter will be explored later.
To summarize what has been developed so far, the native mythologies which deal
with headhunting make one major point. It is that the headhunter stands in some-
what the same relationship to tribal cosmology as does the shaman. This parallel is
brought out in several ways. Perhaps the most evident is that there is a strong resem-
blance between the chants sung in curing ceremonies to recover the patient’s soul,
at burial feasts to send the spirit of a dead person on to the after-world (see Sandin
1966), and at head feasts and other ceremonies related to warfare. In all these three
examples transcosmic or intercosmic journeys are narrated, whether the journey be
that of a shaman’s spirit, the souls of the dead, or the immortal gods coming to a feast.
Basically these cosmologies place one’s own village, which is located along a
river, at the center of the universe (See Figure 1).
Barton (1946: 10–11) calls this the “known world.” It is the earth and its inhab-
itants, who are one’s own fellow villagers, who are the only true “earth dwellers,”
which is what the word Ifugao means. This ethnocentric view which places one’s
own tribe in the center of the universe is fairly common in the primitive world. But
certain elaborations such as the importance of the riverine location of the “tribal
village” are particularly Southeast Asian in character. The river serves to orient
the relations between the village and the various outside worlds so that there is an
upstream region and a downstream region. From the upstream region, which may
imply a mountain as well, the immortal deities and culture heroes come and go
between the earth and the upper-world either in or “above” the sky.
4
bird
deities
omen birds
1
wind
spirit 2
frogs
serpents &
worms
The Infugao envision this upper-world area as having many layers, while the Bor-
nean groups tend to concentrate on the notion that a great river runs through it
with many branches along which are settled the deities, the ancestors, and even
some foreign people known to live very far away. The Ifugao believe that the spirits
of the dead make only a brief sojourn to the upper-world. They then are made to
retire on an intermediate hill or in the downstream region. The Bornean groups, on
the other hand, tend to view the duration of the departed soul’s stay in the upper-
world as permanent.
As the upstream region leads to the sky, so the downstream region leads to the
under-world. The latter usually is entered through a deep point in a river conflu-
ence or through the bottom of a deep lake.
The five main regions in the universe are listed in Table 1 with the Ifugao terms
and with the apparent meanings attached to the common Malayo-Polynesian roots
in these words, as suggested by Barton (1946: 10-11; and 1930: 122).
Common Meanings
Region Location Ifaugao Term of Cognate Words
1. Known earth in the middle puya island
2. Upstream beyond known
region earth daiya inland, upstream
3. Downstream betond known
region earth lagod sea, seaward
4. Sky world above the earth kabunian kill
5. Under-world below the earth dalum in, within, deep
The connection between the root meanings of the terms and the regions which bear
them as names is obvious in all but one case. It is not immediately apparent why
the sky world should have something to do with “killing” or “being killed.” Barton
(1930: 122) suggests that likely this name is given the sky world because the im-
mortal beings of the region are thought to require many sacrifices of chickens and
pigs. In Ifugao bunu means sacrifice in particular. Of course we cannot be certain
of this. The use of this term may be linked with many other ideas. For example, the
sky is a place visited by the dead even if they do not remain there for long. Another
more intriguing possibility is that the sky is also the place of the deities who are the
“patrons” of headhunting. In fact among the Tinguan, another group in northern
Luzon, the term Kabunian is not the name for a place in the universe but rather the
name of their leading sky-dwelling god, who was a great fighter and “the patron of
headhunters” (DeRaedt 1964: 312).
Regardless of the reason for calling the sky world by a term meaning “killing,”
“killed,” or “killer,” it is interesting to note that among the five regions it is the
only one named in an indirect or “euphemistic” way. It is almost an epithet, when
compared with the transparent meanings of the terms for the other regions. This
suggests that the focus on the sky world in this cosmological system has been so
important as to trigger more intense emotional reactions than has been the case
with the other four domains. Thus, while this is a cosmology which definitely in-
volves a complementary opposition between the upper-world and the under-world,
attention seems to be more strongly focused on the former. Warfare and shaman-
ism especially are believed to have their divine sponsors and originators in the
heavens, while the gods who control agriculture seem to reside in the under-world.
The under-world, seen perhaps as a great interior (dalum), is also accorded some
importance with regard to human fertility. Understandably, it seems that the neces-
sity of creative interaction between upper-world and under-world receives great-
er stress with respect to this matter than with respect to any of the others so far
mentioned.
The Iban view of the world is roughly the same as that described for the Ifugao.
However, there is less concern about demarcating specific upstream and down-
stream regions on earth as mediators to the regions above and below. Instead the
horizon and a pair of mythical gates to the sky and the under-worlds are more
prominent. An outstanding feature of the Iban cosmology is that all of the main
upper-world deities are birds. At least they normally appear to men as birds. But
in their own home, which is a great longhouse in the sky world, they exist as
humans.
One of these birds is clearly supreme over the others. He is Singalang Burong,
the brahminy kite. The seven other most prominent birds are his sons-in-law.
These birds act as his messengers to mankind, for they are the omen birds. They
are able to give warnings and convey other messages of vital importance to men
and women on earth. I might add that this notion of son-in-law relationships as
a means of mediation between gods and men carries over into all aspects of Iban
folklore. For example, the male culture heroes often marry the daughters of the
gods whom they meet in other realms and from whom they receive special charms
or perhaps instruction in important rituals and customs. This theme appears in the
kinship terminology where the word menantu, meaning “son- or daughter-in-law”
looks suspiciously like the verbal Prefix men, plus antu, or “spirit being.” So a child-
in-law is one who has formed new and potentially good or useful relations between
unrelated people who were previously antu-like strangers to each other.
Omens, whether sounded or shown by birds, deer, or other creatures, are all re-
garded as divine messages. Of course, they are considered important to warfare and
nearly all other pursuits. Singalang Burong himself is most directly concerned with
success in warfare. It was he who taught the Iban to celebrate the head feast which
is called Gawai Burong, “Bird Feast” or alternatively Gawai Kenyalang, “Hornbill
Feast.” The Iban do not view the hornbill as an omen bird, and so the prominence
of this bird, in the form of beautifully carved effigies, at the head feast has remained
an obscure point in Iban religion. However, we must remember that hornbill beaks
are said to have adorned the battle helmets of the great legendary warriors in their
journeys to the sky. Certain other Bornean groups (Scharer 1963 on the Ngaju)
have viewed the hornbill as a cosmic bird who nests in the tree of life, and then
again as a psychopomp who escorts souls and religious offerings to all corners of
the universe.
Beneath the Iban earth is the realm of a powerful and mysterious ruler who
can control the growth of forests and command all the animals on earth to do his
bidding. He probably is a dragon, or Naga, king, that is, an under-world serpent.
He holds many charms and secrets of life giving power in his rich domain beneath
the earth. Humans encroach on his domain when they burn swidden fields. So he
must be placated with offerings. But these cannot be given directly to him. They are
given to his favored son-in-law, Pulang Gana.
An Iban culture hero, this same Pulang Gana, now perhaps a god, married a
daughter of this chief of the under-world. He acquired a knowledge of all the rules
that the Iban should observe in planting rice. In fact he made the rules up himself
since his father-in-law gave him complete control over agriculture. Pulang Gana
continues to live in the under-world. He is called up to earth, mainly for the Gawai
Batu, or “Wet-stone Feast” at the beginning of the agricultural year. He expects cer-
tain offerings of food, and he does not want people to harm worms when clearing
or burning the fields. Worms and serpents appear to be under-world symbols in
logical opposition to the bird deities of the upper-world. In some accounts, Pulang
Gana himself is said to have been born with no arms or legs.
The frog that in this case is a somewhat transitional, under-world animal de-
serves mention. When Pulang Gana comes to earth the last zone of the under-
world passed through on the way to the door to the earth is inhabited by frogs
(Jensen 1966a: 29). A crayfish-like spirit actually guards the door. I mention the
position of the frog in Iban cosmology, although he is a minor figure, because this
animal appears again in other headhunting myths and also on the ancient bronze
drums of Southeast Asia which I believe express these same cosmological themes.
The frog teaches the Kayan that taking heads brings fertility.
The Iban dead go to the sky world where they are reunited with their own an-
cestors, the culture heroes, and the gods. Large death feasts are held. But the an-
cestors as such do not continually demand sacrifices, as seems to be the case with
some groups in northern Luzon (see DeRaedt 1964).
i.e., to the target groups of headhunting raids, a remote cosmological locus. For
the headhunter, the ideal enemy should come from one of the theoretically non-
human spheres posited by the cosmology. In particular it seems that actual living
enemies are felt to be harbored in the more intermediate spheres, e.g., in the up-
stream region, the downstream region, the places towards the horizon, through
the deep haunted forests, and across watersheds. They are not in the worlds be-
lieved to lie above or below the earth’s surface. As yet, however, the details of
this cosmology are not completely clear. What is clear is that a cosmological
view which treats enemies as being fairly remote should have some bearing on
the way in which real live enemies are selected. Later this chapter will indicate
that this remote locus assigned to the enemy by the cosmology is, for the most
part, actually born out also in spatial and social terms. Most headhunters, often
traveling by canoe, actually do make most of their war raids in relatively distant
areas.
Our immediate concern now is with how such activities look when viewed from
the standpoint of native cosmology. What we have discovered is that by their eth-
nocentrism these systems of belief pose a profound contradiction. For they insist
that human enemies must come from non-human spheres of the universe. It is as
if the actual humanity of the living strangers—people who in Iban are called orang
bukai, “people negated” or “people who are not people,” posed a clear threat to
one’s self and to the entire belief system of one’s own society. This is most acutely
the case because it was through the original ethnocentric assertion of the exclusive
humanity of one’s own people, as being the only true earth dwellers, that the strang-
ers first came to be classified as non-humans. By strangers is implied a relation-
ship between separate tribal communities who have few common bonds or shared
activities other than possible opposition in warfare. They, nonetheless, are aware
of each other’s existence and mutually acknowledge this on some terms. No doubt
the strangers were a problem to begin with, because of their peculiar ways. These
would tend to point out the relativity of one’s own culture’s assumptions about how
people should live. But after discounting them as not being real people, they should
not go turning things around by asserting their humanity. The catch is that the only
thing they have to do to accomplish this assertion is to be.
Therefore, we have the following predicament:
– One’s own humanity depends on the classification of strangers as
being sub-human or non-human. That is, this classification depends
on downgrading or negating their humanity;
– Yet they are in fact human beings;
– Therefore, any potential recognition of their humanity, whether it
comes through their own assertion of human qualities or in other
ways, clearly is a threat to one’s own humanity.
In other words, the enemy poses a phenomenological threat. His actual human ex-
istence in the non-human cosmological zone is more than this ideological system
can take. It completely upsets and contradicts the view of reality which proclaims
the exclusive humanity status of one’s own people. As suggested earlier, the idea
that one’s own group has a complete monopoly on human status has come about as
an attempted resolution of other important contradictions in tribal life, especially
those brought on by the fact of cultural relativity. (See Berger and Luckmann 1967;
and Berger 1967: 29–51; for interesting treatments of the phenomenological bases
of xenophobia.) What exists is a chain of social contradictions and a series of suc-
cessive attempts at their ideological reconciliation. The question of defining and
then deciding what to do with remote strangers comes at the end of this chain. It is
therefore crucial in a cumulative sense. The problem, however, is that the policy of
defining these strangers as being non-human raises a new contradiction of its own:
for the non-human is really human. It is this final contradiction which headhunt-
ing and headhunting rites seek to overcome.
This chain of successive contradictions is fairly intricate, so at the risk of seem-
ing repetitious I will retrace some points in the hope of unraveling the cumulative
effects of defining remote strangers as semi-human and as categorical enemies. For
an immediate overall understanding of the development of the ideological system
involved, the best clue is to regard it as growing out of the social process which
Peter Berger has aptly termed “reality maintenance.” (See Figure 2 ).
A B C D E F G
Other Human
Death Cultures Non-Human
The small tribal society, having shorn up its own world of social reality by reference
to the more permanent totality of nature, now faces another challenge. This new
challenge to the absolute validity of its own way of life comes from outside the tribe
itself. It comes in the form of other human communities living noticeably differ-
ent ways of life. These people seem almost like some different species. Worst of all,
while they do not observe the principles and customs that compose one’s own way
of life, they seem nonetheless to be getting on well—if not, in fact, thriving. This
comes as a critique of the assumed broad validity of one’s own way of life, i.e., it is
Contradiction Two.
This new challenge is met by viewing the foreign communities as only pseudo-
humans or perhaps pseudo-species of their own type. The Marind-anim headhunt-
ers of southern New Guinea have a special term for all non-Marind peoples of New
Guinea. This word means something like “semi-human objects of headhunts.” The
Mundurucú headhunters of Brazil had a similar system for dividing humankind
into real people and a pseudo-species to be hunted. Southeast Asian hill tribes,
however, tend to leave this non-human or semi-human classification of strangers
somewhat more implicit in the cosmology itself. Nevertheless, this classificatory
scheme resolves the problem of the inconvenient strangers. We can refer to it as
Reconciliation Two.
So far the contradictions pointed out as well as their ideological resolutions
have been of a general sort. They appear in most tribal societies, those whose mem-
bers are headhunters as well as non-headhunters. But we are now coming to points
which seem to be of much greater concern to headhunting tribes than to other
peoples—Contradiction Three: the supposed “non-humans” are really human.
But before examining this final contradiction, it is necessary to make some
suggestion why the concerns and contradictions examined in this account take a
more acute form among headhunters than they do among other tribal peoples. In
Southeast Asia this situation seems to be related to the pronounced riverine settle-
ment pattern of most of the headhunting tribes. Often the favored location for a
village is along rivers navigable by canoe. This settlement pattern dates back to at
least the village farming stage of the Southeast Asian neolithic, beginning around
6000 bc (Solheim 1972). At that time no state-organized societies existed in the
region. River-based tribal communities of swidden cultivators, growing root crops
and sago at first and later dry rice as well, were able to occupy the middle and lower
reaches of the great river systems, including those which later came to serve as the
heartlands for the historic Southeast Asian kingdoms.
These kingdoms were economically based on wet-rice cultivation and inter-
national trade, After the formation of the state in the region, around 200 bc to
200 ad, riverine swidden cultivation continued on as a way of life primarily in the
“hill regions” that were beyond the control of the state-organized societies of the
plains. Headhunting and the ideological complex of which it is a part seem to have
developed as far back in time as the early period of riverine village agriculture in
Southeast Asia—perhaps older.
The reason why a riverine settlement pattern has been so conducive to the de-
velopment of this ideological complex is explained by various factors. It leads to the
formation of tribal groups on the basis of unity within a small river basin or, in the
case of large rivers, unity among the people of a particular river section. One result
is that geographic accessibility and social distance tend to conform closely to each
other. Gaps in each region normally coincide with the geographic barriers separat-
ing river systems or subsystems one from another.
Since marriage everywhere is influenced by proximity, a tendency develops for
most marriages to occur within the river-based tribal group (see Freeman 1970;
Toichi Mabuchi 1966). Under these conditions, both the geographic remoteness of
other tribes as well as the relatively slow pace of the material encroachments made
by any one tribe into the domain of another, tend to accentuate the plausibility of
the cosmological system outlined here. Headhunting tribes seldom, if ever, find
themselves in the position of many tribal groups in the New Guinea highlands who
say that they marry the same people whom they fight (Meggitt 1964). The enemies
of headhunting groups are in all respects more remote. They do not come showing
their strength to contend rights in land. Nor do they stand accused of using mar-
riage as a pretense to steal one’s body dirt to work a pointed sorcery against the
members of one’s own group. They are too remote for this deed. They live in the
counter-spheres of the universe and they are less human than sorcerers.
The riverine settlement pattern promotes these illusions. The inter-tribal dis-
tance and the geographic, rather than human, barriers imposed by this pattern
partly permit a concentration on the enemy as an existential problem independent
of direct material concerns. The use of canoe transport on the relatively large river
systems adds to the practical possibility of making forays into distant enemy ter-
ritories and then fleeing in hasty retreat with the heads taken. In the highlands of
northeast India and northern Luzon, where such river navigation is not always
possible, the returning war parties put sharp bamboo spikes in the path of their re-
treat to slow the enemy’s counterattack. Where a quick getaway by canoe is possible
these spikes on the trail are not so important.
The use of canoes on large river systems is also instrumental to allowing a small
tribal society, with no great chiefs or kings, to envision the possibility of laying
claim to, if not actually exploiting, an environmental domain which is spatially
greater in scope than the hamlets the tribe can actually “occupy” during given ag-
ricultural cycles. The gathering of wild sago in delta areas seems to create a similar
situation if the necessary canoes are available. In this manner there are pressures
both for river basin unity and for keeping other groups at a distance.
Returning now to the third contradiction, we find that it emerges as a direct
result of Reconciliation Two. In Reconciliation Two strangers are regarded as a
semi-human or non-human pseudo-species. This mode of classifying those who
do not observe one’s own customs and who do not marry with one’s own people
is a way of defending the integrity of one’s culture. But if the strangers should start
appearing too human, this presents a new challenge to one’s own way of life. This
challenge is as deep as the earlier one presented by their original act of living such
an aberrant way of life. This is Contradiction Three. It occurs because the supposed
non-humans of Reconciliation Two are actually members of the species Homo sa-
piens. As a result they keep doing things which would remind the most xenophobic
observers of their common humanity. For example, there are such possibilities as
intermarriage at some future time or of learning a smattering of each other’s lan-
guages. However, except in mythology and in dreams, men and women never have
these kinds of exchanges and encounters with members of any other species than
their own. At first the foreigner’s culture was upsetting. His humanity now has be-
come the central problem. It is this third contradiction which headhunting seeks
to reconcile.
By now the seriousness of the problem can be sensed. The nonhuman classifica-
tion of the remote stranger has become the linchpin in an ideological system which
seeks to reconcile a series of successive contradictions inherent in tribal life. Should
this pin become loose then this philosophy of ethnocentrism could recoil on itself.
What makes this situation more precarious is that all that the stranger needs to
do to bring about this crisis is to assert his own humanity. This he can do by merely
existing. The remote stranger nonetheless poses a threat even without committing
any acts of aggression and without being in direct competition with one’s own peo-
ple over women, riches, land or other natural resources. The threat is that he too
may be human. If he is human, then by the wisdom of the ethnocentric philosophy
previously outlined, one’s own community loses its special place in the world. The
reality status of one’s culture would again be in question. Since the stranger poses
an existential threat, he should be killed. Murphy (1957: 1026) has written, in re-
gard to headhunting among the Mundurucú, who would go on expeditions of over
a thousand miles to take heads: “the enemy tribes caused the Mundurucú to go to
war simply by existing.” It can now be seen why this is so. For by existing the enemy
or remote stranger contradicts an entire ideological system.
The crucial point, so it appears, is that it is not enough for headhunters to kill
their enemies. They must take their heads and bring them home. This is what
makes them headhunters.
Konyak Nagas. Fürer-Haimendorf (1969: 95) reports that whenever the heads
1.
of enemies were taken, “They were carefully preserved and fed with rice beer at
all feasts.”
Land Dayaks. Geddes (1954a: 21) writes that in the Land Dayak head ceremo-
2.
ny, “a woman skilled in the necessary ritual placed the head on her knees and
chanted to it, in words calculated to destroy the will of its spirit to retaliate upon
the village for the outrage which had been done to it. Other women might re-
peat the procedure, after which all the men and women present took it in turns
to dance with the head held in their hands, this being apparently to please the
head with the honor paid to it and partly to please themselves and the ancestors
with the spectacle.”
Later on food offerings were made to the spirit of the head. When the festi-
val finally ended “the head was taken to be hung up in the headhouse. By this
time the malice of its spirit should have been rendered inactive, but it seems
that sometimes it was considered a precaution to give it daily offerings of food
for up to nine months to make certain that it [the malice] would not revive.”
Once in the headhouse the heads are somewhat ignored but “As a sign of re-
spect they may occasionally be tidied, and hung by fresh strings.”
3. Iban. Gomes (1911: 213) says that at the major Iban head feast “Some human
heads are placed in large brass dishes in the public hall of the Dayak house, and
to these offerings of food and drink are made. Some of this food is stuffed into
the mouths of these heads, and the rest is placed before them.” Both Howell
(1963: 104–05) and Dunn (1906: 408) point out that there is a mocking element
in this as well as a friendship theme. But however ambivalent, good treatment is
essential. Howell asserts that there is a belief among the Iban that “unless they
give the head something to eat its ghost will eat them.” More expressive of ritual
incorporation are the verses, sung by the women of the longhouse, in which
they claim to care for the newly-acquired heads much as they do for a new born
infant. Dunn (1906: 424–25) gives these as follows:
What! O Goddess dwelling in the head waters of Tapang Betenong.
Why? O Senawai, will these heads not cease to weep so loud and bitterly.
Have I not rocked them in the two-roped swings?
And sung to them like the sweet-voiced Manang Lambong?
Have I not nursed them in blankets of choicest pattern?
Yet they cease not to weep so bitterly?
4. Kayan. Hose and McDougall (1912: 20–23) report that the heads brought into a
Kayan longhouse are believed to provide a habitation for certain spirits or Toh.
Regular attention must be paid to the heads or the Toh might get angry and
cause some misfortune. “Barak [rice wine] is offered to the heads by pouring it
into small bamboo cups suspended beside them; and a bit of fat pork is pushed
into the mouth of each. The heads, or rather the Toh associated with them, are
supposed to eat and drink these offerings.” Also “The fire beneath the heads is
always kept alight in order that they shall be warm, and dry, and comfortable.”
A curious fact is that if a Kayan community had collected too many heads, the
It is these acts of ritual incorporation that ultimately reconcile the final con-
tradiction confronting the hyper-ethnocentric headhunting peoples. Headhunting,
followed by the ritual incorporation of the enemy, supplies Reconciliation Three in
the process previously outlined. How this resolution is accomplished can be un-
derstood better if we borrow Mary Douglas’ (1966: 48) notion that ritual peril can
be defined as being “matter out of place.” Any perceived contradiction in the way
one’s culture structures reality can create such a ritual state of danger. Headhunters
are confronted with a very special form of matter out of place, namely humanness.
What they require is a concrete symbol of a human so they can put it “back in
place.” The severed head seems to fit this purpose.
This perspective presents a new way of viewing the contradiction presented by
the cosmologically remote stranger. He is supposed to be “non-human.” But the
apparently inescapable and empirical fact of his humanity keeps putting human-
ness where it should not be. This is why something has to be brought back and, in
one way or another, made a member of one’s own society. Otherwise headhunting
would be pointless for it is impossible to kill a phenomenological threat. Since this
threat cannot be directly removed, a means must be found of giving it a proper
place in one’s own favored view of reality. In the case of the headhunter’s enemy,
this is done by making sure that if something about him is human, that part can
belong to one’s own society and no longer be out of place.
We now have come to a position in this analysis where the reasons for head-
hunting rituals are understandable. As Mary Douglas expresses in the quotation
beginning this chapter, we now know that these rites “express something relevant
to the social order” of the tribal societies that perform them. They bring the in-
convenient humanness of the theoretically nonhuman enemy “back” into society
where it belongs. By so doing they rescue an entire ideological system from being
destroyed by its own inherent contradictions. But for this ritual conversion of an
enemy into a friend to occur some ritual object representing him must be made
available for incorporation.
The choice of the head: Names, faces, and the social person
The ritual context in which the severed human head is used as a central ritual
symbol is a rite which incorporates the humanness of a categorically non-human
enemy into one’s own group. But what makes the head the part of the human body
symbolically the most appropriate for conveying this ritual message about social
relations with remote strangers? Would not cannibalism and subsequent disposal
of the skeletal remains serve as well for symbolic incorporation? This would be a
literal incorporation. Apparently cannibalism is not sufficient. One possible reason
why it is not is that such a policy of digestion and discard would leave no tangible
remains that could continue to represent the old enemy as a new friend.
In the Land Dayak myth of Kichapi, which is their charter myth for the head
feasts, there is an incident which seems to underline the futility of cannibalism
as opposed to headhunting. The two giants who adopted Kichapi, when he is lost
in the forest, wanted to keep him in their house in a cave. “The giant and his wife
said to each other that they must make sure he could not escape. They agreed that
the best of all ways to make sure was to eat him. So the husband swallowed him.
But Silanting Kuning [Kichapi, by his childhood name] immediately slipped right
through his body. Then the giantess tried but he slipped right through her. The gi-
ant tried again, with the same result. Seven times the husband tried and seven times
the wife tried, but neither could keep him inside his or her stomach. Having failed,
they began to like him” (Geddes 1957: 82).
Incidentally, while Kichapi, as the hero of this myth, is pictured as a young boy
miraculously transformed into a great warrior, it is quite possible that he actually is
a head as much as a headhunter. For example, while in the forests he is always car-
ried by the giants on their backs. When he comes to Gumiloh’s village, her recep-
tion of him, as opposed to that by the men of her village—he is fed from her dish
although he appears as an orangutan—suggests the proper reception for a fresh
head. Kichapi also has a peculiar preference for sleeping in the rafters of the head-
house where captured heads are hung. The failure of the giants to keep him in their
cave by cannibalism is significant.
If cannibalism will not work, why not bring home body parts other than the
head? As already mentioned other body parts are carried home as souvenirs but
no major cults form around them. The collection of scalps by Indians in North
America was more a reflection of war deeds than the incorporation of enemies as
mystical friends. There are, in fact, many societies which took heads in this way.
For them the head trophy was a mere adjunct to warfare, not one of its main ob-
jects. The head was not the focal symbol of a religious system. The Kwakiutl and
the Maori fit this pattern. Peoples with this practice may be viewed as “head takers”
not full headhunters.
At the level of individual trophies used for the purpose of counting coup, it
seems that almost any body part will do—depending, of course, on each culture’s
pornography of violence. Yet when it comes to the ritual purpose of reconciling
some of the contradictions discussed in this chapter, only heads will do. There ap-
pears to be something about the head which causes it to be selected for. It is not a
case of all the other body parts being selected against. The choice of the head must
have been a positive one based on its symbolic appropriateness and not a negative
one based on default with respect to the symbolic values of all the other body parts.
What is appropriate about the head?
The answer comes by reconsidering the Marind-anim custom of naming their
children after slain enemies. In brief, any last utterance of the enemy can be taken
as his “name,” and several men on a single successful expedition are privileged to
pass on the newly acquired name to their separate children and sister’s children.
This custom forces one to ask a slightly different question about the symbolic
valence of heads: “Why is a head like a name?” The answer is that it contains the
face, and both names and faces are overt symbols of the individual as a social per-
son. Both express the uniqueness of the individual in a form that can be presented
to society. Names and faces express individuality at the social level and social being
at the individual level. In the case of names, this is why many cultures such as our
own refer to personal names or nicknames as, “handles.” They are the handles that
give society-at-large access to the individual person—they create for the individual
a social personhood. To have a name is to be a social person. Likewise to have a
recognized face is to be drawn into social relationships as one’s personal self and
not as an anonymous (in the literal sense) occupant of an official social position.
Personal names and recognized faces are truly the most intimate expressions
of social identity. While they present us to society, they also present us as our own
unique selves and not some stereotyped social category. This is so in spite of the fact
that many societies permit a number of people to have the same personal name.
For special usages tend to grow up around the sharing of names. In many cultures
people who are namesakes to each other are viewed as sharing in each other’s social
identities. They will extend kinship terms to each other’s relatives on the under-
standing that as social persons they are inter-changeable or somehow the same.
The uniqueness of each person’s face has much to do with the value of the face
as a symbol of the individual as a social person. No doubt an added factor is that in
direct social interaction (called “face-to-face” interaction) it is the face which can
with the least amount of movement be the most expressive of human thoughts and
feelings (Simmel 1965).
Interestingly, the face is not technically a true anatomical unit. It is not a single
organ of the body and not the center for other organs. The entire head is used to
house the distinct sensory and other organs, some of which appear on the face. In
defining the face it must be viewed as an outward configuration composed of cer-
tain more distinct anatomical referents, e.g., eyes, nose, mouth, etc. Most of these
referents are located on the frontal portion of the head. There is room for dis-
agreement in this topic. What about the ears, hair-line, cheeks, and chin? In some
cultures a face would not be considered the face of a true social person unless it
were tattooed or ornamented. In summary, there are cultural as well as anatomical
referents in the total configuration of the face.
One must conclude, therefore, that the face is more a sociological than an ana-
tomical concept. In social situations it is through the face, more than other body
regions, that individual identity and expressivity are recognized and conveyed. The
best we can do in defining the face is to assert that it is a head-located configura-
tion of both anatomical and cultural referents. All these facts converge to make the
face, and the head to which it belongs, the most likely concrete symbol of the total
social person.
The overriding importance of the face, as a symbol of social personhood, ap-
pears repetitively in art and drama. For example, houses, canoes, and other man-
made objects that are given proper and perhaps “personal” names in southern
New Guinea have faces either carved or painted on them. Throughout the world
performers must wear masks in ritual dramas. Masks are more able to separate
the everyday identity of the performer from his assumed identity as the character
portrayed in the drama than are shoes, sleeves, gloves, jackets, or the like. Indeed,
the concept of the social person is so linked with an appreciation of the face that
the English word for person comes from the Latin persona, for “mask.” In conclu-
sion, it is common experience for specific names and familiar faces to serve as the
bridge between a unique individual taken in isolation and that same unique indi-
vidual treated as a social person. In like manner, names in general and unknown
or stylized faces can be taken as symbols of the social person as a generalized
concept.
Headhunters take a head for the sake of its face. Obtaining the face allows them
to deal with their enemy as a generalized social person. In this form it is meaning-
ful ritually to convert such a person from an enemy to a friend. The head, which
must include the face is a concrete symbol of the social person as names are verbal
symbols of this same concept. As ritual symbols these two parallel symbols are
highly appropriate to the ritual context where they are used. They were not chosen
in an arbitrary way. The head (and face) has the capacity to represent what is most
human about the supposedly non-human enemy. As a social person the enemy can
clearly and meaningfully be brought in from without and made a friend. In this way
his problematic humanness is properly put “back” where it belongs.
viewed only according to the dimension of “own” versus “other.” The in/out opposi-
tion is the second dimension of group affiliation. Its neat logical structure quickly
tells why other peoples or categorical strangers and enemies are viewed almost as
“counter people.” The imagery of strangers and spiritual beings as being upside
down and backwards in what they do takes on a greater meaning than that which
usually is made so immediately apparent by the symbolic inversions themselves.
There are four logically possible types of social person if one takes the social
dimension of group affiliation and combines it with the social dimension of topo-
logical locus, whether internal or external, with respect to social margins. These
four types are indicated in Table 2.
Table 2.
Dimensions Combined
Type Group Affiliation Topological Locus
1 Own and Internal
2 Own and External
3 Other and Internal
4 Other and External
Figure 3 shows these same four types in a two-by-two presentation. Social persons
of Type 1, own and internal, are easy to recognize as being represented by one’s
own people or “friends.” Social persons of Type 4 are also familiar as enemies or
strangers. Our usual understanding of “we” as opposed to “they” involves the two
compound types: 1, own and internal; and 4, other and external, respectively.
a b
c d
It is the logical Types 2 and 3 that are more difficult to fill with our ordinary socio-
logical categories of people. But Type 2, own and external, can be filled if one looks
to religious beliefs. Ancestral spirits, for example, are members of one’s own group,
although death has made them external to the everyday social world. The spirit
helper of a shaman might also fit logically into this type. For most cultures, how-
ever, the dead of one’s own group are the prime representatives of Type 2. Type 3,
other and internal, is more outside the range of our normal sociological vocabulary
than is Type 2. But for headhunters, the incorporated head-name-face of a former
enemy fills this logical type. In other words if it is possible for enemies to be other
and external social persons and for ancestors to be own and external social persons,
why should the newly incorporated symbol of the enemy as a general social person
not be viewed as other but internal social person? So for headhunters all of the logi-
cal possibilities are represented.
final arrival of the dead person’s soul into the afterworld. This ritual requirement
was necessary if the movement from one reality sphere into another were to be
balanced.
Earlier interpretations based on theories of the desire for revenge at the loss of
a relative, or on the animistic notion that the soul of the headhunting victim would
in the afterworld become a servant to the dead of the victor’s group, seem superfi-
cial in terms of their failure to grasp the deeper structure of the native theory. The
only extent to which the victim becomes the servant of the victor, or of the victor’s
own deceased relatives, is that he can help one make the journey to the afterworld.
It is the matter of balancing movement or transition through reality spheres which
is crucial, not the acquisition of servants in the afterlife itself—although that notion
may be a pleasing embellishment on the deeper theme. On this topic, the following
notation is offered for the Naga of Manipur.
Our forefathers have told us that when a man dies in fight, he is clad in
his war-dress. If he does not die in fight, he is not so clad.
When he who kills him dies, the man who was killed comes to him
[the killer] and tells him to carry his basket. “I will not carry it,” says the
conquerer, “for I defeated you in your life-time.” They fight about this.
“You did not defeat me” says the other. Says the conqueror, “If you deny,
rub your face and see.” Then he rubs his face, and find marks of a dao
[bladed spear] on it. “It is true,” he says, “my friend, you defeated me. I
will carry the basket,” so he does so. (Hodson 1911: 195)
So in a single stroke the ritual of headhunting reconciles all the major contradic-
tions of human existence in the tribal world. It balances out life and death at the
same time it makes enemies friends. In Figure 3 line a to b shows the movement
from life to death (Contradiction One). People of one’s own group, although still
retaining their group affiliation as ancestral spirits, become external social persons
when they die. This movement is balanced or reversed by the movement shown by
line d to c where an enemy who is both an external social person and someone with
an “other” group affiliation is made into an internal social person.
The group affiliation of trophy heads remains problematic. It seems that a tug-
of-war goes on between the head-losers and the headtakers for the loyalty and good
will of the ancestral soul of the slain person (see Beyer and Barton’s 1911 descrip-
tion of “head losers” mourning rites among the Ifugao). This may explain why one’s
own people who die by violence often are buried in a separate and out-of-the way
place.
In line d to c headhunting reconciles the contradiction between life and death.
The loss of one’s own people is made up for in the acquisition of a new internal
social person.
Line a — d of Figure 3 represents the contradiction among the living between
one’s own people and their culture and other peoples with strange other cultures.
The movement from c to d reconciles this contradiction by making the stranger
cum enemy who is at first an external social person into an internal one.
Conclusion
This chapter has provided some new answers to the following questions: 1) What
kind of statement about the social order of a tribal society is made by and through
headhunting ritual?; and 2) Why has the severed human head been selected as the
most apt symbol for expressing certain of the key meanings contained in that ritual
statement? These answers are now summarized and some of their broader implica-
tions are explored.
The major statement made by and through headhunting rituals can be phrased
as a searching concern with the limits of the social world. To celebrate a head feast
is to declare that much of what is alien and threatening—what lurks beyond the
edges of a tribal life-world—can be successfully absorbed by the tribe. It can be
placed in a more friendly relationship with other things, things which belong to
the more familiar inner zones of hearth and home. This is an important claim for
a society to make. It assures a people that their way of life need not be surrendered
to all that is foreign and hostile to its basic tenets. As a shaman’s trance traditionally
succeeds in bringing the external forces of nature and the spirit world into a closer,
less threatening relation with the inner spheres of community life, so the rituals of
headhunting lessen the threat posed by human (or “semi-human”) outsiders.
More specifically, the rituals of headhunting serve to incorporate into one’s own
social world the remote stranger or enemy. The rite makes an external social per-
son into an internal one, an enemy into a friend. In addition, and this is crucial to
this analysis, the rite restores the stranger’s misplaced humanity to one’s own com-
munity, the only place where true human qualities belong. Whatever the particular
history of raiding and vengeance may be in a given locale, one main crime of the
enemy is that he is so strikingly human yet he lives in a region that has been zoned
as non-human. He resides in an area which is regarded as hostile to the ordinary
tenets of one’s own way of life. A relocation of the enemy’s humanity is a needed
correction.
The head is chosen as the most apt symbol for these rites because it contains
the face, which, in a manner akin to the social value of personal names, is the most
concrete symbol of social personhood. Social personhood, in turn, is the enemy’s
most human attribute, and is therefore the attribute which must be claimed for
one’s own community. Some headhunters appropriate this attribute in the form of
the head itself, while others do so in the form of the personal name which belonged
to the living enemy. In either case, something is done which places the symbolic
personhood of the enemy in one’s own community. The rituals offer some resolu-
tion of the recurring problem of the misplaced humanity of strangers.
Beyond these conclusions, some more general comments are in order now.
The material causes and consequences of headhunting warfare have been slighted.
Vayda (1961: 346–58) argues that Iban warfare was a mechanism for territorial
expansion; the history of the Iban seems to support him. However, warfare and
headhunting are not identical. Headhunting implies some degree of warfare, but
warfare does not necessarily imply ritual treatment of heads. Only the meaning of
the cult of enemy heads has been explained in this chapter. And this is indepen-
dent of the intensity of material conflict going on in any given region at any given
time.
How this complex of meaning relates to other matters cannot be fully consid-
ered in this account. It is suggested that the relations between the head cult, on the
one hand, and the material conditions of warfare, on the other, are not as obvious
as they may first appear. Nor are they as obvious as would be the case if the cult
of trophy heads could be reduced to a functional legitimation of warfare and kill-
ing, functioning, ultimately, in the interests of material competition or population
dispersal. In fact, what seems most typical is that the material conditions exist-
ing between headhunters and their enemies are ones of great physical distance to
begin with and of little or no direct environmental competition. What competi-
tion does exist is usually indirect or gradual. It is over reserves of land (and other
resources) which would not be used intensively by either group until the future. I
have called this condition a slow pace of material encroachment. Nor does it seem
that the head cult, with its concomitant raiding pattern, is primarily responsible for
promoting the relatively great distances between groups which characterize this
condition. The cult is a response to these conditions of distribution and settlement,
not a promoter of them. The slow pace of material encroachment brings about a
situation in which the enemy can be perceived as an existential threat long before
he can be viewed as a direct material threat.
This seems to be the way that the institution of headhunting, and the elaborate
traditions surrounding it, evolved. In any given case, however, the raiding that goes
with headhunting can take on other seemingly adaptive functions as envisioned by
Vayda. At times these adaptive functions will be expansionary, as in the case of the
Iban; at other times they will be more defensive, as in the case of the Marind-anim
of West Irian. While raiding far and wide and incorporating many captives into
their very sizeable home villages, they did surprisingly little in the way of taking
over the vacated territories of the groups whom they had victimized. Instead, their
reputation as treacherous warriors helped only in securing a firmer hold on the
favored coastal zone which they already occupied.
In terms of its possible adaptive values, headhunting often has served more this
second or generally defensive function than it has expansion. One reason is that
the ritual complex continues to add greatly to a strong sense of community life,
without much active raiding. This tends to promote rather large and cohesive vil-
lage formations that would produce a defensive advantage. Under most conditions
of primitive warfare a significantly large and cohesive village cannot easily be dis-
lodged from its preferred area. Such a group is too capable of effective retaliation to
be made a regular target of raiding by other groups.
When it comes to tracing the emic, or culturally meaningful, connections be-
tween the head cult and the material conditions of warfare, one should not place
too much weight on any of these possible adaptive advantages, whether defensive
or expansionary. They are, in a sense, only specialized applications of the cult, not
its source. The basic issue is identifying the general condition of a slow pace of
material encroachment as the material condition which most encourages a con-
templation of the enemy as being primarily an existential threat. From a recogni-
tion of this condition one is led immediately to consider the kinds of moral and
philosophical questions which the head cult seeks to resolve regardless of the cur-
rent intensity of warfare. It is this insight alone which enables one to appreciate the
separate importance of elaborate head rituals, independent of killing per se.
The most telling point about headhunting is that killing alone is insufficient to
do away with the phenomenological threat posed by the headhunter’s categorical
enemy. He, or his most human qualities, must be brought into the fold to further
totalize the headhunter’s society as the only human realm. Some might say that in
picking out remote enemies the headhunting societies are externalizing violence.
But this is a pessimistic view. It assumes that as humans we all carry a heavy internal
load of hostility and aggression. It implies that if we do not find an external object
as an outlet for innate aggressive tendencies, we will all stew in our collective juices.
But headhunters have a different theory. While at times aggressive and proud, they
do not rationalize the act of killing the enemy in terms of some biological necessity
to externalize violence. For them that would be intellectual child’s play. They claim
the converse: they are internalizing friendship; they are winning souls for humanity.
Regarded philosophically, the mission of the headhunter was a worthwhile one.
It is sad but true that with respect to warfare the moral philosophy of the head-
hunter is superior to our own. This is sad because we are capable of causing more
destruction and death than were headhunters. Our methods of warfare allow us to
forget that our enemies have faces and names. Although the headhunter on a raid
was a treacherous and indiscriminate killer of men, women and children, there
were at least some human as well as technological limits to the brutality of the sys-
tem in which he acted. His wars were waged in the mystical upstream and down-
stream regions against people who could provide links with the eternal powers of
the gods and ancestors. Our wars can be fought on electronic battlefields with the
same strategies commonly used to eliminate vermin.
If there was something wrong in the humanistic moral philosophy that led
headhunters to conduct their raids, it is mainly that it had a severe sociological
handicap. Their joy about being human always had a narrow social base. Outsiders
could be fitted into this scheme only through violence. As with most peoples the
humanism of the headhunters fell short of encompassing the brotherhood of man.
Appendix: An exchange between Jan van Baal and the author on the
topic of headhunting
Out of a deep admiration for Jan van Baal’s ethnography of southern New Guinea
and for his illuminating reappraisal of the anthropology of religion (van Baal 1971),
in March of 1978, quite out of the blue, I sent him a copy of “Human and proud of
it!.” I took the liberty of expanding on a point about the Marind-anim, for whom
he was the authority. My hand printed notes covered the bottoms of six consecutive
pages. This Marind-anim example had become important to my argument because
it was the best documented example of the practice of naming children after an en-
emy whose head had been taken. Justus M. van der Kroef had written quite tellingly
in 1952 about this same practice among the nearby Asmat people, but van Baal’s
monumental ethnography of the Marind-anim in 1966, simply called Dema, made
him the authority. Since names, heads, and faces all seemed to be overt symbols of
social personhood, this allowed me to advance the claim that headunting always
seemed to be a ritual means of making an external social person, an “enemy,” into
an internal social person, a “friend.”
van Baal kindly replied to me in a carefully thought out letter of seven long
single-spaced pages. In it he gave credit to my analysis for at last adding something
new to our understanding of headhunting, but he wanted to correct some errors
and express some general disagreement about whether or not headhunting could
be understood purely in terms of ritual. He thought I had ignored the emotional
side of headhunting, which he felt involved much aggression, anger, and classic
assertions of masculine pride. He also responded to my hand printed notes. These
supplementary notes are as follows:
There is much more to this example [of Marind-anim child naming].
The Marind-anim give names to many things, some of which express a
series of differences in degrees of social distance. For example, children,
pigs, dogs, and canoes are all named. In this series it is clear that children
are the closest and most loved; pigs are fond pets; dogs are less loved and
are mainly used for hunting; canoes may be a matter of pride but they
also take people far away. In myths canoes turn into serpents when they
reach the limits of the known world. Thus we have the following series of
named things from near to remote:
Near – children – pigs – dogs – canoes – Remote
The names given to the members of this series derive from another one,
which also expresses degrees of social distance. The dema, or totem
beings, are the prototypical Marind-anim. They reside directly under
one’s village and represent the cosmological home base of the Marind-
anim. Next come the names of places in friendly territory. Then come
the names of places in enemy territory. Finally, there are the names of
enemies themselves. Thus the order here is as follows:
Near – dema beings – friendly places – enemy places – enemies – Remote
The naming system actually reverses this pattern of order so that near
things from the first series are named after far things from the second
series, as follows:
Things named
Near – children – pigs – dogs – canoes – Remote
Sources of names
Remote – enemies – enemy places – friendly places – dema beings – Near
By use of names, what goes out in one series is brought back in in the
other. The systematic nature of this alignment verifies that names taken
form enemy heads are used to bring the enemy into a closer relation with
the home group.
van Baal’s second objection was that although the Marind-anim fit my model of
headhunting peoples (usually) traveling fairly great distances to attack enemies and
take their heads, they were in fact exceptional in this regard. Some surrounding
peoples in southern New Guinea, who also took heads, raided peoples who were
much closer to them. Knowing this, he saw a weakness in my general argument.
He did say that fighting near-by peoples was common throughout New Guinea,
but these neighboring coastal groups had combined that general pattern with the
distinctive regional pattern of headhunting. I thanked van Baal for this additional
information but went on to say that even if this were true, it still seemed to be the
case that most headhunting peoples drew a moral distinction between enemies
whose heads could, and in all likelihood should, be taken and other enemies or
opponents whose heads should not be taken should a killing occur. So with this
familiar distinction in mind, I said that that actual distances between headhunters
and their targeted enemies were probably more relative than my model implied. I
also pointed out that my model owed a great deal to Mabuchi Toichi’s 1968 account
of spheres of geographical knowledge and sociopolitical organization among ab-
original peoples of Taiwan. He identified people’s home group spheres, their main
in-law groups, then the in-laws of their in-laws, then a much less familiar hear-say-
zone, and then, finally, complete strangers (who were not viewed as truly human).
Most Taiwan aboriginals took heads from people in the hear-say-zone or in the
dangerous-to-enter complete stranger zone.
van Baal’s third objection had to do with the Marind-anim practice of naming
children after enemies. Here he corrected my hand printed notes. He said while
the overall pattern seemed substantive and true, I was in error about the dema be-
ings as residing beneath one’s village. He corrected me by saying, “Their places of
retirement may be far away.” I admitted that I had misunderstood this because of
over interpreting the primordial sense of who the dema are in Marind-cosmology.
Curiously, van Baal said that the enemy names bestowed on children were rarely
used by people. Such names were reserved for formal occasions such as initiations
where they were invoked “to remind the community of the killer’s prowess.” So the
incorporation of the victim in the child “never becomes apparent.” I still regarded
incorporation as a tacit meaning to this custom, though apparently under-empha-
sized by the Marind-anim. I cited van der Kroef ’s (1952) account of the Asmat who
actually went so far as to attempt to build on relations between the child named for
a victim and the victim’s surviving relatives. This was viewed as a potential ground
for cross-tribal alliances, to be drawn upon in future wars against people further
afield. Here the conversion of enemies to friends through headhunting could be-
come literal.
van Baal also said that, in addition to naming children after slain enemies, the
Marind-anim also fully assimilated captives brought back from war raids. He said
that this implied that they did not, in fact, regard enemies as non-human. They
could be fully embraced as fellow humans. I saw no contradiction in this since,
in the adoption of captives, kinship is allowed to transcend and more or less erase
political and ethnic differences. I had written about a similar tendency of the Iban
of Borneo to assimilate former enemies (McKinley 1978).
van Baal’s fourth objection was his most fundamental. It was based on his view
that aggression, not ritual, was at the base of headhunting. He said, “Taking all
ever before of the general validity of the original argument. I must thank the edi-
tors of Hau for bringing me back to take a fresh look at “Human and proud of
it!”—warts and all. I can remember when I was first working on the paper, talk-
ing to friends, and pointing out that I had reached the point where headhunting
had come to seem to me so logical as a system of beliefs, that I had more trouble
trying to explain why some people were not headhunters than why other people
were. Headhunting is a topic still very much worthy of further investigation. For
example, see the interesting and important contributions in the 1996 volume edited
by Janet Hoskins (Hoskins 1996). Headhunting probably existed in Southeast Asia
for about 6000 years, which is a much longer run than those institutions we so pre-
sumptuously call “world religions.”
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Robert McKinley received his PhD in anthropology in 1975 from the University of
Michigan. His primary reseach has been on child transfers and siblingship within
a Malay community in Malaysia. He has concentrated his work on kinship, ritual,
religion, and social theory. Since 1973, he hast taught at Michigan State University,
first in anthropology and presently in religious studies. He has been a Fulbright
lecturer at the University of Malaya, a visiting lecturer at the National University of
Singapore, and at the University of Michigan. He is currently working on a book
about pre-state societies called Stone age world system: Why humans were in global
networks from day one (whenever that was!). That will be followed by works on
anthropology as a fourth way of knowing, the diversity of religious views among
hunter-gatherers, the structure of human volition, and a long term perspective on
Malay culture.
Robert McKinley
Department of Religious Studies
Michigan State University
732 Wells Hall
East Lansing, Michigan 48824, USA
mckinle5@msu.edu