Witchcraft and Its Implications for Women Reconsidered

Judith C. Bachmann
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

In Africa, witchcraft as both a practice and concept is characterized by diversity. A number of places such as Nigeria hold a general suspicion that women are more likely to be witches. This gendered social practice has been studied in anthropology. However, African women’s reactions and interests regarding practices associated with witchcraft (identification, deliverance, healing etc.) have not been studied sufficiently. And in particular, women’s multi-religious backgrounds have often been ignored. This article argues that research on witchcraft in Africa carries a burden of epistemic violence. It has often left the ascription of witchcraft to women unquestioned and at the same time, overlooked women’s own diverse religious perspectives and the interplay of this with witchcraft belief. Based on fieldwork among the Yoruba in Nigeria, the article analyses how witchcraft is ascribed as female, how women are impacted by this and how they position themselves within this social practice. It discusses these gender dynamics as related to the effects of epistemic violence and agency. Results show that women participate in the production of witchcraft as an imagined exclusive female practice, yet their dealings with witchcraft also implicate agency and the possibility of socio-religious change.
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巫术及其对女性的影响
在非洲,巫术作为一种实践和概念具有多样性的特点。尼日利亚等地普遍怀疑女性更有可能成为女巫。人类学对这种性别化的社会实践进行了研究。然而,非洲妇女对与巫术有关的做法(身份识别、解救、治疗等)的反应和兴趣尚未得到充分研究。尤其是,妇女的多宗教背景往往被忽视。本文认为,对非洲巫术的研究带有认识暴力的负担。它经常让女性对巫术的归属毫无疑问,同时也忽视了女性自身不同的宗教观点以及这与巫术信仰的相互作用。本文基于尼日利亚约鲁巴人的实地调查,分析了巫术是如何被归为女性的,女性是如何受到这种影响的,以及她们如何在这种社会实践中定位自己。它讨论了这些与认知暴力和能动性的影响有关的性别动态。结果表明,女性参与巫术的生产是一种想象中的排他性女性实践,但她们与巫术的交往也涉及代理和社会宗教变革的可能性。
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