Description
Isak Niehaus provides the context for this fascinating study of witchcraft practices. He shows how witchcraft was politicised against the backdrop of the apartheid state, the liberation struggle and the establishment of the first post-apartheid regime, which all affected conceptions of witchcraft. Niehaus demonstrates how the ANC and other political groups used witchcraft beliefs to further their own agenda. He explores the increasingly conservative role of the chiefs and the Christian church. In the process, he reveals the fraught nature of intergenerational and gender relations.
The result is a truly insightful and theoretically engaged account of a much-studied but frequently misunderstood practice.
About the Author
Isak Niehaus is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Anthropology and Archaeology, University of Pretoria, South Africa. Eliazaar Mohlala is the joint author of Witchcraft, Power and Politics (Pluto, 2001). Kally Shokaneo is the joint author of Witchcraft, Power and Politics (Pluto, 2001).
Reviews
'Profound and often painful insights into the transformations that have taken place in South Africa' -- Times Literary Supplement
'Demonstrates that the recent changes in witchcraft beliefs and persecutions are closely related to those conditions which have exacerbated the misery and poverty of rural Africans in this region' -- Anthrops - International review of anthropology and linguistics.
'An important contribution to the study of contemporary witchcraft in South America.' -- Anthropology in Action
Book Information
ISBN 9780745315584
Author Isak Niehaus
Format Paperback
Page Count 272
Imprint Pluto Press
Publisher Pluto Press
Weight(grams) 410g