Description |
xi, 178 pages ; 24 cm |
Series |
Cambridge studies in social and cultural anthropology ; 94 |
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Cambridge studies in social and cultural anthropology ; 94
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Contents |
1. Illnesses of the heart and soul: the case of Asalama ---- Part I. Images of possession. 2. Inversion and other tropes in spirit possession rituals --- 3. 'Like a tree branch swaying in the wind': the head dance --- 4. Illnesses of God: personhood, knowledge and healing ---- Part II. Art, agency, and power in the ritual sessions. 5. Sound, solitude, and music --- 6. The tande n goumaten songs |
Summary |
Among the Tuareg people in the Air Mountain region of Niger, women are sometimes possessed by spirits called "the people of solitude." The evening curing rituals of the possessed, featuring drumming and song, take place before an audience of young men and women, who joke and flirt as the ritual unfolds. In her analysis of this tolerated but unofficial cult, Susan Rasmussen analyses symbolism and aesthetic values, provides case studies of possessed women, and reviews what local people think about the meaning of possession |
Analysis |
Niger |
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Religion |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 165-170) and index |
Notes |
Cambridge studies in social and cultural anthropology no:94 |
Subject |
Spirit possession -- Niger.
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Tuaregs -- Religion.
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Women, Tuareg -- Religious life.
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LC no. |
94011233 |
ISBN |
0521470072 |
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9780521470070 |
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