Capital sorcier et travail de Dieu

Over the last two decades, witchcraft has been analysed as a component of "African modernity". Yet these discourses on the "modernity" of witchcraft rarely challenge the culturalist distinction established between the Christian God of the civilising mission and the "genius&q...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Tonda, Joseph (Auteur)
Type de support: Imprimé Article
Langue:Français
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Publié: Ed. Karthala 2000
Dans: La politique africaine
Année: 2000, Numéro: 79, Pages: 48-65
Sujets non-standardisés:B Magie
B Zentralafrika
B Formation d’une théorie
B Culture traditionnelle
B Idéologie
B Christianisme
B Modernisation
B Subsaharisches Afrika
Description
Résumé:Over the last two decades, witchcraft has been analysed as a component of "African modernity". Yet these discourses on the "modernity" of witchcraft rarely challenge the culturalist distinction established between the Christian God of the civilising mission and the "genius" of paganism. Rather than identifying the discourses on witchcraft and occult powers with an African theodicy, as do many current analyses, the author argues that the powers of both the Christian God and witchcraft share the same magical, occult nature and both participate in the "structures of causality" of evil in the "African modernity" that they symbolize. (Polit afr/DÜI)
ISSN:0244-7827
Contient:In: La politique africaine