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4 - Refiguring the person: the dynamics of affects and symbols in an African spirit possession cult

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Ellen Corin
Affiliation:
McGill University
Michael Lambek
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
Andrew Strathern
Affiliation:
University of Pittsburgh
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Summary

Persons and selves: the politics of representation

Throughout history, the description of other cultures has been shaped by a politics of representation which can be neither dissociated from nor subjected to the relationships of power and domination constitutive of the colonial order. Travel narratives and ethnographic descriptions of explorers, missionaries, and merchants are permeated by the unusual super-position between a referential use of language, supposed to provide a precise description of an objective reality “out there” to be described, classified, categorized through language, and the oniric representation of the world in which the Other becomes an imaginary screen for projecting the hidden fantasies, desires, anxieties, and the dark side of our own being (Obeyesekere 1995; Taussig 1987; Zavala 1989). Post-colonial criticism has dealt with both of these aspects, but behind the power politics of the colonial encounter, we can see that this problematic representation of other cultures reveals the difficulties and limitations of the encounter with the Other and the danger of drifting toward objectiflcation and subjectification when minimizing or absorbing the alterity of the Other within the illusory continuum of an immediate understanding. Solutions proposed by contemporary anthropology to the aporia of the encounter with the other are often unsatisfactory since they themselves are embedded within a North American ethos organized around notions of “empathy,” “feeling,” and “experience”.

The first travel narratives described other customs, ways of being, and beliefs from a natural history perspective with the intention of creating a taxonomy of non-human and human objects and species.

Type
Chapter
Information
Bodies and Persons
Comparative Perspectives from Africa and Melanesia
, pp. 80 - 102
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1998

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