This study describes and interprets the ritual activity that follows
upon death in the Tanga Islands, Papua New Guinea. Robert J. Foster
shows how the performance of large-scale feasts and ceremonial exchanges
both commemorate the dead and regenerate the social relations of the
living. He places the rites in an historical context by demonstrating
how the effects of participation in an expanding cash economy has
allowed Tangans to conceive of the rites as "customary" in opposition to
the new and foreign practices of "business."