Witchcraft, Violence, and Democracy in South Africa
In Witchcraft, Violence, and Democracy in South Africa, Adam Ashforth examines how people in Soweto and other parts of post-apartheid South Africa manage their fear of ’evil forces’ such as witchcraft. Ashforth examines the dynamics of insecurity in the everyday life of Soweto at the turn of the twenty-first century. He develops a new framework for understanding occult violence as a form of spiritual insecurity and documents new patterns of interpretation attributing agency to evil forces. Finally, he analyzes the response of post-apartheid governments to issues of spiritual insecurity and suggests how these matters pose severe long-term challenges to the legitimacy of the democratic state.
376 pages | 8 halftones, 1 map | 6 x 9 | © 2004
Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology
History: African History
Political Science: Comparative Politics
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
A Note on Nomenclature
Introduction
Part One / Soweto
1. Spiritual Insecurity and Political Power
2. Dimensions of Insecurity in Contemporary Soweto
3. On Living in a World with Witches
4. Freedom, Democracy, and Witchcraft: Soweto in the 1990s
5. On Believing, and Not Believing, in Witchcraft
Part Two / Sources of Spiritual Insecurity
6. Poison, Medicine, and the Power of Secret Knowledge
7. Death, Pollution, and the Dangers of Dirt
8. A Brief History of the Spirit World
9. Invisible Beings in Everyday Life
10. Vulnerabilities of the Soul
Part Three / Spiritual Insecurity and the State
11. Witchcraft, Violence, and Justice
12. Democratic Statecraft in a World of Witches
Epilogue
Appendix 1: The Literature on Soweto—a Brief Excursus
Appendix 2: The Thohoyandou Declaration on Ending Witchcraft Violence, Issued by the Commission on Gender Equality
Selected Bibliography
Index
Awards
                    African Politics Conference Group/London School of Economics and Political Science: Best Book on African Politics
                    Shortlist
                  
                    African Studies Association: Melville J. Herskovits Award
                    Won
                  
                    Association of Global South Studies: Toyin Falola Africa Book Award
                    Won