Narrating our future: customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cape Town, South Africa
The Centre for Advanced Studies of African Society (CASAS)
2011
|
Schriftenreihe: | CASAS book series
no. 81 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Klappentext |
Beschreibung: | xi, 242 Seiten Illustration |
ISBN: | 9781920287092 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Contents
1 The Land, the Language and the People n
Mairi Blackings page 1
1.1 Geography and demography 1
1.2 Recent political history 1
1.3 Language * 2
1.4 Chief economic activities 3
1.5 Natural heritage 4
1.5.1 The Riyer Nile 4
1.5.2 The Nimule National Game Park 5
1.5.3 The Fulla Falls 5
1.5.4 The Travellers Tree 5
1.5.5 Fort Dufile in Uganda 6
1.5.6 Difule animal sanctuary 6
2 Birthing and Naming Rituals
Marcellina Morgan 7
2.1 Prenatal preparation and birthing 7
2.1.1 Obstructed labour and immorality 8
2.1.2 Multiple and deformed birth rituals 9
2.2 Postnatal care and naming 9
2.2.1 Postnatal care 9
2.2.2 Naming the infant 10
2.2.3 Naming ritual 11
2.3 Conclusion 13
3 The Paradox of Immortality and Death
Marcellina Morgan 14
3.1 Death: inevitable or avoidable? 14
m
IV
3.2 Role specifications following a death 15
3.2.1 The preparation of the body 15
3.2.2 The digging of the grave 16
3.2.3 The interment of the body 17
3.3 Extra-Ordinary deaths 18
3.3.1 Burial of violent death victims 18
3.3.2 Burial of foetus 19
3.3.3 Burial of overeating victims 19
3.3.4 Royal burial 20
3.3.5 Burial of people who die in foreign lands 21
3.3.6 Burial of victims of bewitching 21
3.3.7 Burial of an inheritor 22
3.4 Burial rituals and arising matters 22
3.4.1 Postmortem and inquest 22
3.4.2 Compensation 23
3.4.3 Dispersal rituals 24
3.4.4 Disposal of the deceased s estate 25
3.5 Conclusion 26
4 The Changing Faces of Courtship
Abdulla Wani Mairi Blackings 28
4.1 How and when courtship may be bypassed 28
4.2 The evolution of courtship 29
4.2.1 The thumb piano era 30
4.2.2 The flute era 30
4.2.3 The bicycle era 31
4.2.4 The letter era 31
4.2.5 The courier era 33
4.3 Courtship preparation 34
4.3.1 Courtship attire 34
4.3.2 Love tokens 35
4.4 M di marriage types and conventions 36
4.4.1 Formal marriage 36
4.4.2 Elopement 37
4.4.3 Kasurube marriage 37
4.4.4 Child betrothal or child marriage? 38
4.4.5 Levirate 39
4.4.6 Posthumous marriage 40
4.4.7 Royal courtship 41
4.4.8 Walking stick marriage 42
V
4.4.9 Sorority marriage 42
4.4.10 Bondage marriage 43
4.4.11 Plural marriage 43
4.5 The institution of bride price 44
4.5.1 Making the case for bride price 44
4.5.2 Bride price requirements 46
4.6 Separation and divorce 49
4.7 Conclusion 50
5 Rainmakers and Land Custodians
Abdalla K Wani 52
5.1 Inherited traditional rulers 52
5.2 The rainmaker, the jurisdiction and role 52
5.3 Rain stone types and possession 53
5.4 Rain saboteurs and the consequences of sabotage 56
5.5 Mechanisms of rain subversion 56
5.5.1 Urube: the trial of a saboteur rainmaker 58
5.5.2 Urube: the burial of a rainmaker 59
5.5.3 The trial of rainmakers who fail to deliver 60
5.6 Land Custodians, their jurisdiction and Shrines 61
5.6.1 The Moli shrines 62
5.6.2 The Lokayi shrines 63
5.6.3 The Bori-Opari shrines 64
5.7 Conclusion 65
6 Ma di Religion: A Case of Selected Immortality
Main Blackings 67
6.1 Religion as conceived by the Ma di 67
6.2 Ma di deities and the Ma di golden era 68
6.2.1 The Ma di Golden Rule 68
6.2.2 The Ma di Golden Age 68
6.2.3 Ma di deities 69
6.3 The different attributes of Vu 70
6.3.1 Vu as the physical abode of the impersonal 70
6.3.2 Vu as the symbolic representation of the
impersonal 71
6.4 Communion with the Impersonal 72
6.4.1 Ma di prayer session 72
6.4.2 Elements of sacrifice 74
6.4.3 Ma di sacraments 77
6.5 The Sacred and the secular 78
VI
6.5.1 Taboo and totem 78
6.5.2 Concept of lemi 79
6.6 Ma di clerical class 80
6.6.1 Land Custodians 80
6.6.2 Rainmakers 80
6.6.3 Seers 80
6.7 The Soul, the body and the hereafter 81
6.7.1 One or multiple souls? 81
6.7.2 Conditional immortality 82
6.8 Conclusion 83
Ma di Verbal Art Form: Proverbs
Main Blackings John Azza 85
7.1 Proverbs 85
7.2 Flora 86
7.2.1 Water and rainfall 86
7.2.2 Plants 87
7.2.3 Seasoning 87
7.3 Wild animals 88
7.3.1 Lions 88
7.3.2 Monkeys 89
7.3.3 Elephants 89
7.3.4 Buffalo 90
7.3.5 Fish, reptiles and rodents 90
7.3.6 Winged termites 91
7.4 Domestic animals 92
7.4.1 Goats 92
7.4.2 Dogs 92
7.4.3 Fowls 93
7.5 Human relationships 93
7.5.1 Kinship 93
7.5.2 Body parts 94
7.5.3 Communal virtues 95
7.6 Household items 96
7.6.1 The axe 96
7.6.2 Crockery 96
7.6.3 The Water pot 97
7.6.4 House 97
7.7 War and peace 97
7.8 Maxims 98
Vil
7.8.1 Prohibitive 98
7.8.2 Cautionary 99
7.9 Riddles 100
7.10 Tongue Twisters 100
7.11 Pageri Ti 100
7.12 Conclusion 101
8 Inyányá: A Lethal Weapon or Urban Myth?
Mairi Blackings 102
8.1 Mass hysteria, witch-hunt and lynch squads 102
8.2 The preserving Self and the poisoning Other 104
8.2.1 Defining the poisoner 104
8.2.2 Establishing guilt by association 104
8.2.3 The target of the Má dí poisoner 106
8.3 Convenient truths, inconvenient inyányá 106
8.3.1 Administration of inyányá 106
8.3.2 Geographical restrictions 107
8.3.3 Gender: women as prime purveyors 107
8.3.4 Indicators of poisoning ‘ 109
8.4 Alternative explanations: reality check 110
8.4.1 Inyanya as a way of dealing with loss 110
8.4.2 Inyanya as a way of dealing with the Other 111
8.4.3 Death by inyányá or by other means? 112
8.5 Conclusion 113
9 Inyányá: Towards the Eradication
Victor V Joseph 115
9.1 Identifying the problem 115
9.2 Epidemiological investigation 116
9.3 Community response to the threat 117
9.4 Recommendations 118
9.5 Conclusion 119
10 Spirit Possession in Má dí Culture
M Blackings Nigel Fabh 120
10.1 Spirit possession in the form of orí in Má dí culture 120
10.1.1 Illness, death, spirits and orí 120
10.1.2 The stages of orí and its exorcism 122
10.1.3 Má dí orí and Acholi Jok 127
10.1.4 Summary: on in Má dí culture 129
10.2 The symbolism of orí 129
10.2.1 Symbolism 129
131
132
134
138
139
141
146
146
146
147
147
147
148
148
148
149
149
149
150
150
151
151
152
152
153
153
153
153
154
155
155
156
156
157
159
10.2.2 Cultural assumptions about orí
10.2.3 Assumptions made manifest by the exorcism
of orí
10.2.4 The smell of elephant meat being cooked is
a trigger for an attack of orí
10.2.5 The symbolic structure of Orí
10.3 Orí is not a mental illness
10.4 Conclusion
Traditional Ma di Medicine
Abdalla K Wani
11.1 What is traditional medicine?
11.2 Acquiring the knowledge
11.3 Sources of traditional Ma di medicine
11.3.1 Plant
11.3.2 Animal parts
11.3.3 Mineral
11.4 Ailments treated
11.4.1 Fever, menighitis, diarrhoea and cough
11.4.2 Skin and related diseases
11.4.3 Abscess and wounds
11.4.4 Rheumatism, strain and tetanus
11.4.5 Poisoning
11.4.6 Metaphysical ailments
11.5 Surgery
11.5.1 Abscesses
11.5.2 Guinea worm
11.5.3 Bone-setting and spinal manipulation
11.5.4 Posthumous caesarian
11.5.5 Cupping
11.5.6 Cosmetic surgery
11.6 Why traditional medicine?
11.7 Conclusion
Ma di Dances, Songs and Instruments
Abdalla K Wani
12.1 Dance and music
12.2 Ma di dance types
12.2.1 Funeral dances
12.2.2 Recreational and courtship dances
12.2.3 Ritual dances
IX
12.2.4 Royal dances 161
12.3 Ma di songs 165
12.3.1 Topical and political songs 165
12.3.2 Dirges and elegies 166
12.3.3 Panegyric songs 166
12.3.4 Lullabies 167
12.3.5 Folklore songs 168
12.4 Percussion instruments 168
12.4.1 Idiophones 168
12.4.2 Membranophones 169
12.4.3 Aerophones 169
12.4.4 Chord ophones 169
12.5 Conclusion 170
13 Contemporary Ma di Music: A Critical Appraisal
Rina Meleby 171
13.1 Cultural revolution 171
13.2 Music as a vehicle of social reform 172
13.2.1 Virtues of hard work * 172
13.2.2 Fighting social prejudices 173
13.2.3 Anti-drinking 174
13.2.4 Teenage pregnancy 175
13.2.5 Domestic violence 175
13.2.6 Challenging the Diaspora 176
13.3 Blending the indigenous and the exotic 177
13.4 Conclusion 178
14 The Philosophy of Traditional Ma di Education
Ben Katoro 180
14.1 The philosophical framework 180
14.2 Gender specific roles 181
14.3 Learning through observation 182
14.4 Impact of physical environment 183
14.5 Limitation of Ma di traditional education 184
14.6 Conclusion 185
14.7 Bibliography 186
15 Children s Leisure and Pastime Activities
Marcellina Morgan 187
15.1 Role of games in child development 187
15.2 Imposed gender differentiation in games 187
15.3 Physical activities and games 188
X
15.3.1 Hoping 188
15.3.2 Skipping 188
15.3.3 Baruu 189
15.3.4 Go-go 189
15.3.5 swimming 190
15.3.6 Lawal 190
15.4 Language and mental skills 190
15.4.1 Story telling 190
15.4.2 Whose potato mound? 191
15.4.3 Camu camu kwe 191
15.4.4 What are you eating? 192
15.4.5 Gifts from my aunt 193
15.5 Problem solving activities 194
15.5.1 Mancala 194
15.5.2 Draughts 194
15.5.3 Hide and Seek 194
15.5.4 Aji 195
15.5.5 Card games 196
15.6 Musical games 196
15.6.1 Songs 196
15.6.2 Ti tioko 196
15.6.3 Spinning top game (perekele) 197
15.7 Conclusion 197
Appraisal of Mä di Folktales
Abdalla K Wani 199
16.1 Function of folktales 199
16.2 Ma di folktale characters 199
16.3 Story telling time 200
16.4 Opening and ending stories 201
16.5 Conclusion 202
Hunting Practices and Rituals
Abdalla K Wani 204
17.1 Hunting as foraging 204
17.2 Hunting and mobilization types 204
17.2.1 Net expedition ( voi) 205
17.2.2 Sleep-Over expedition (voi o du ) 205
17.2.3 Day expedition (arumu ) 206
17.2.4 Torch and kill expedition (dwari) 206
17.2.5 Animal Trap (gonyi) 206
xi
207
207
208
209
210
212
212
212
214
216
218
219
219
219
220
220
221
222
222
222
223
224
224
225
226
227
229
229
230
231
232
232
233
234
241
17.3 Hunting arsenals
17.4 Distribution of game parts
17.5 Economic use of animal parts
17.6 Hunting rituals
17.7 Conclusion
Decline of a Female Cottage Industry: Pottery
Abdalla K Wani
18.1 Pottery: female cottage industry
18.2 Acquisition of skills through apprenticeship
18.3 Pottery production process
18.4 The archeological and economic value of pottery
18.5 Conclusion
Ma di Customary Law
Mairi Blackings Abdalla K Wani
19.1 The realm of customary law
19.2 The judicial and other powers of the chief
19.3 Structure of Ma di customary courts
19.3.1 The A court
19.3.2 The B court
19.3.3 The C court
19.4 Major conflict types and resolution mechanisms
19.4.1 Land conflicts
19.4.2 Murder within the family
19.4.3 Murder outside the family
19.4.4 Manslaughter and infanticide
19.4.5 Marital conflicts
19.4.6 Blood relations nuptials
19.4.7 Grounds for divorce
19.5 Evidence veracity
19.5.1 Establishing veracity of utterances
19.5.2 Guilt establishing rituals
19.6 Bride price as legalizing marriage
19.7 Inheritance
19.8 Inquest and compensation
19.9 Conclusion
Appendix: Ma di Clans
Abdalla Keri Wani
Notes on the Contributors
This first ever ethnographic survey of the Ma di people presents in
a coherent form, and from within rather than from a distance, the cus-
toms, rituals and practices of the Ma di people. The Ma di, with a pop-
ulation of about 390,000 occupy the southernmost part of South Sudan
and the northern tip of Uganda. This study strives to deepen the ex-
planatory range of Ma di culture and deepen its interpretive powers by
exploring the hunting and land purification rites, the fading worlds of
land priests and rainmakers, the enduring indigenous Ma di religious
belief systems, the holistic approach to traditional medicine and educa-
tion, the functional role of folklore and children s games, the appraisal
of heart throbbing traditional and contemporary songs and dances, the
rituals associated with naming, birthing, marriage and burial.
The articles are explicitly and implicitly linked together by an elas-
tic thread of sustainability and the notion that - that which sustains us
- Vii, or Mother Earth, must itself be sustained. Thus, while the arti-
cle on courtship celebrates the continuity role of procreation, the essay
on hunting rituals and practices celebrates the physical and spiritual
modes of sustaining the community. If the article on poisoning warns
of the dangers lurking at the next turn, the pottery and folklore articles
attempt to re-establish the link between the community and its past.
ISBN 978-1-920287-09-2
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author2 | Blackings, Mairi John |
author2_role | edt |
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author_facet | Blackings, Mairi John |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV043715130 |
callnumber-first | D - World History |
callnumber-label | DT433 |
callnumber-raw | DT433.245.L83 |
callnumber-search | DT433.245.L83 |
callnumber-sort | DT 3433.245 L83 |
callnumber-subject | DT - Africa |
classification_rvk | LB 63547 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)992552768 (DE-599)BVBBV043715130 |
dewey-full | 305.89624 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 305 - Groups of people |
dewey-raw | 305.89624 |
dewey-search | 305.89624 |
dewey-sort | 3305.89624 |
dewey-tens | 300 - Social sciences |
discipline | Soziologie Sozial-/Kulturanthropologie / Empirische Kulturwissenschaft |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV043715130 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:33:13Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781920287092 |
language | English |
lccn | 2010289966 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-029127313 |
oclc_num | 992552768 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-703 |
owner_facet | DE-703 |
physical | xi, 242 Seiten Illustration |
publishDate | 2011 |
publishDateSearch | 2011 |
publishDateSort | 2011 |
publisher | The Centre for Advanced Studies of African Society (CASAS) |
record_format | marc |
series | CASAS book series |
series2 | CASAS book series |
spelling | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda edited by Mairi J Blackings Cape Town, South Africa The Centre for Advanced Studies of African Society (CASAS) 2011 xi, 242 Seiten Illustration txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier CASAS book series no. 81 Alltag, Brauchtum Lugbara (African people) Sudan Social life and customs Lugbara (African people) Uganda Social life and customs Brauch (DE-588)4008017-1 gnd rswk-swf Madi Volk (DE-588)4742346-8 gnd rswk-swf Tradition (DE-588)4060560-7 gnd rswk-swf Madi Volk (DE-588)4742346-8 s Tradition (DE-588)4060560-7 s Brauch (DE-588)4008017-1 s DE-604 Blackings, Mairi John (DE-588)1089333137 edt CASAS book series no. 81 (DE-604)BV012954891 81 Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029127313&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029127313&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda CASAS book series Alltag, Brauchtum Lugbara (African people) Sudan Social life and customs Lugbara (African people) Uganda Social life and customs Brauch (DE-588)4008017-1 gnd Madi Volk (DE-588)4742346-8 gnd Tradition (DE-588)4060560-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4008017-1 (DE-588)4742346-8 (DE-588)4060560-7 |
title | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda |
title_auth | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda |
title_exact_search | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda |
title_full | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda edited by Mairi J Blackings |
title_fullStr | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda edited by Mairi J Blackings |
title_full_unstemmed | Narrating our future customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda edited by Mairi J Blackings |
title_short | Narrating our future |
title_sort | narrating our future customs rituals and practices of the ma di of south sudan and uganda |
title_sub | customs, rituals and practices of the Má'dí of South Sudan and Uganda |
topic | Alltag, Brauchtum Lugbara (African people) Sudan Social life and customs Lugbara (African people) Uganda Social life and customs Brauch (DE-588)4008017-1 gnd Madi Volk (DE-588)4742346-8 gnd Tradition (DE-588)4060560-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Alltag, Brauchtum Lugbara (African people) Sudan Social life and customs Lugbara (African people) Uganda Social life and customs Brauch Madi Volk Tradition |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029127313&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029127313&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV012954891 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT blackingsmairijohn narratingourfuturecustomsritualsandpracticesofthemadiofsouthsudananduganda |