ISBN:
9780299123130
,
0299123138
,
1282788167
,
9781282788169
Sprache:
Englisch
Seiten:
Online Ressource (xxi, 399 pages)
,
illustrations.
Ausgabe:
Online-Ausg.
Serie:
New directions in anthropological writing
Paralleltitel:
Erscheint auch als Boddy, Janice Patricia Wombs and alien spirits
DDC:
305.309625
Schlagwort(e):
Muslim women Sudan
;
Zār Sudan
;
Islamic marriage customs and rites Sudan
;
Spirit possession Sudan
;
Sex customs Sudan
;
Musulmanes Soudan
;
Zâr Soudan
;
Mariage Rites et cérémonies islamiques
;
Soudan
;
Possession par les esprits Soudan
;
Vie sexuelle Soudan
;
Sudan
;
Sudan (Nord)
;
Muslim women
;
Zār
;
Islamic marriage customs and rites
;
Spirit possession
;
Sex customs
;
Spirit Possession
;
SOCIAL SCIENCE ; Gender Studies
;
Islamic marriage customs and rites
;
Muslim women
;
Sex customs
;
Spirit possession
;
Zār
;
Huwelijksgebruiken
;
Riten
;
Islam
;
Zar-Kult
;
Besessenheitskult
;
Muslimin
;
Hochzeit
;
Brauchtum
;
Geister
;
Kult
;
Sudan
;
Sudan ; Nord
;
Sudan
;
Electronic books
Kurzfassung:
Based on nearly two years of ethnographic fieldwork in a Muslim village in northern Sudan, Wombs and Alien Spirits explores the zâr cult, the most widely practiced traditional healing cult in Africa. Adherents of the cult are usually women with marital or fertility problems, who are possessed by spirits very different from their own proscribed roles as mothers. Through the woman, the spirit makes demands upon her husband and family and makes provocative comments on village issues, such as the increasing influence of formal Islam or encroaching Western economic domination. In accommodating the spirits, the women are able metaphorically to reformulate everyday discourse to portray consciousness of their own subordination. Janice Boddy examines the moral universe of the village, discussing female circumcision, personhood, kinship, and bodily integrity, then describes the workings of the cult and the effect of possession on the lives of men as well as women. She suggests that spirit possession is a feminist discourse, though a veiled and allegorical one, on women's objectification and subordination. Additionally, the spirit world acts as a foil for village life in the context of rapid historical change and as such provides a focus for cultural resistance that is particularly, though not exclusively, relevant to women. -- Publisher description
Kurzfassung:
The human world. Departures ; Enclosures ; Boundaries and indeterminacies -- Women, men, and spirits. Zār ; Possession, marriage, and fertility ; Zaineb and Umselima : possession as a family idiom ; Hosts and spirits -- Allegories of the spirit world. The parallel universe ; Two ceremonies ; Arrivals : allegory and otherness.
Anmerkung:
Includes bibliographical references (p. 363-383) and index. - Description based on print version record
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