What is it about?
The strange collusion between occult belief systems and different trans-national social networks, embedded in specific transformations of local and global modes of production, results in unique but reinforcing odifications of witchcraft belief, its underlying structures and its impact on the process of democratisation. The amazing range of possible results has been indicated by the analysis of two outstanding examples of witchcraft violence in South Africa in times of transition: in the former homelands of Venda and Lebowa, seemingly ‘traditional' elements of witchcraft accusations, mediated by a misguided struggle for liberation, stimulated the sympathetic attention of stakeholders beyond the local setting. On the other hand, the occult base of violence in the Transkei became so blurred by the involvement of ‘modern' elements of globalised markets of violence that it was hardly visible any more, although undercover its repressive effects were still very much alive. These different roots of witchcraft violence had serious repercussions on conflict resolution and genuine reconciliation, the base for any sustainable democratisation and development
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Why is it important?
To reduce witchcraft related violence in Sub-Saharan Africa
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Witchcraft and transnational social spaces: witchcraft violence, reconciliation and development in South Africa's transition process, The Journal of Modern African Studies, May 2003, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/s0022278x03004257.
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