Witchcraft after modernity: old and new directions in the study of witchcraft in Africa

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Authors

Kroesbergen-Kamps, Johanneke

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

HAU Society for Ethnographic Theory

Abstract

What are the current trends in the study of witchcraft in Africa? Twenty years ago, the “modernity of witchcraft” approach was very influential. Although key texts from that framework are still often cited, its heyday seems to have passed. This overview of scholarly debates about witchcraft in Africa after 2010 shows three trends: the attempt to explain witchcraft, which stands in a long anthropological history; the focus on human rights, mainly by authors from fields beyond anthropology; and, influenced by the ontological turn, efforts to take witchcraft seriously. The article gives a critical overview of these current trends in the study of witchcraft in Africa, placing them in the context of theoretical perspectives that have preceded them, as well as looking to the future.

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Keywords

Witchcraft, Africa, Modernity, Human rights, Ontological turn

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-01: No poverty
SDG-05: Gender equality
SDG-10: Reduced inequalities
SDG-16: Peace, justice and strong institutions

Citation

Kroesbergen-Kamps, J. 2020, 'Witchcraft after modernity: old and new directions in the study of witchcraft in Africa', HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, vol. 10, no. 3, pp. 860–873.