Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3723
Title: Cupping: A Healing Method in West Sumatra (Indonesia) A Semiotic Perspective
Authors: Stark, Alexander 
Keywords: cupping;ethnomedicine;semiotics;traditional healer
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Redfame Publish
Journal: International Journal of Social Science Studies 
Abstract: 
This article investigates cupping a widespread traditional healing method in West Sumatra. However, the way cupping is used in some areas of the Malay-speaking region is unique in the sense that it uses buffalo horns during the cupping process. The author argues that for the matrilineal society of the Minangkabau in West Sumatra, the buffalo horn has a special connotation as it is crucial in many elements of their culture. By considering a semiotic research approach, the author wants to offer a new perspective on the Minangkabau and their culture. By doing so, the author intends to participate in the discussion about signs and symbols in the field of Minangkabau studies. In qualitative research that comprised fieldwork, traditional healers were observed and interviewed. The peculiar cupping technique was analysed, and a semiotic perspective seemed most fitting. It was detected that the usage of horns contains a specific meaning for the Minangkabau culture.
Description: 
Others
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/3723
ISSN: 2324-803
DOI: 10.11114/ijsss.v10i1.5417
Appears in Collections:Journal Indexed Era/Google Scholar and Others - FBI

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