Abstract
This paper examines gjama, the traditional Albanian ritual of lamentation, through anthropological and psycholinguistic perspectives, highlighting its role as a culturally codified and performative expression of grief. Unlike spontaneous expressions of pain, gjama and related lament practices constitute structured vocal and bodily performances that communicate social, emotional, and symbolic meanings. In northern Albania, gjama is performed primarily by men in response to the death of individuals associated with honor, social status, or familial authority, while women participate in complementary mourning practices. The ritual involves formulaic language, repetition, prosodic modulation, rhythmic patterns, and synchronized bodily gestures, thereby transforming personal loss into a collective experience while reinforcing communal cohesion and cultural continuity. From a psycholinguistic standpoint, the vocalizations present in gjama—including screams, tremors, and tonal variations—function as forms of emotional prosody that activate neural circuits associated with empathy, emotional perception, and social cognition in both performers and listeners. These paralinguistic features enable grief to be perceived and shared communally, rendering pain communicable across individuals and generations. Moreover, the linguistic formulas embedded within the ritual provide cognitive and emotional scaffolding, allowing performers to articulate structured expressions of grief even under conditions of intense emotional stress. Historically, gjama can be traced to pre-Christian and medieval Mediterranean mourning traditions. Literary, archaeological, and ethnographic evidence suggests continuity between ancient funerary laments—such as those found in the Epic of Gilgamesh—and contemporary Albanian practices. Anthropological analysis frames gjama as a socially sanctioned mechanism for regulating grief, preserving cultural memory, and affirming social roles. By integrating historical, cultural, and psycholinguistic perspectives, this study demonstrates that lamentation is not merely an emotional response to death but rather a complex, semiotic, and embodied process through which societies structure, ritualize, and communicate collective suffering.