Witchcraft Suppression Practices and Movements: Public Politics and the Logic of Purification
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Comparative Studies in Society and History
- Vol. 39 (2) , 319-345
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0010417500020648
Abstract
Public practices for the suppression of witchcraft are periodically performed throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. Anthropologists have generally sought to interpret such practices rather than explain them. This interpretation rests on assumptions about what such practices might mean for social actors rather than on the actual social processes which make their public performance possible. In the anthropological view, the performance of anti-witchcraft practices amounts to an expression of discontent with aspects of social and economic life deriving from the terms of Africa's engagement with the contemporary world. Antiwitchcraft practices and the witchcraft discourse of which they are part are understood to constitute locally constructed critiques of social transformation and modernity. But, whatever the coherence of the symbolic logic expressed in anti-witchcraft practices, such accounts fail to explain why large numbers of people participate in such practices from time to time or how such practices become public.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Medicines and the Embodiment of Substances Among Pogoro Catholics, Southern TanzaniaJournal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1996
- `Untouchable': What is in a Name?Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1996
- Sorcery, Power and the Modern State in CameroonMan, 1988
- Witchcraft, greed, cannibalism and death: some related themes from the New Guinea HighlandsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1982
- Religious Movements in Central Africa: A Theoretical StudyComparative Studies in Society and History, 1976
- Death and the social order: Bara funeral customs (Madagascar)African Studies, 1973
- Medicines and Men of InfluenceMan, 1968
- Kamcape: an Anti-Sorcery Movement in South-West TanzaniaAfrica, 1968
- Another Modern Anti-Witchcraft Movement in East Central AfricaAfrica, 1950
- A Modern Movement of Witch-findersAfrica, 1935