Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-dvmhs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-10-02T22:16:07.093Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Delivered from the powers of darkness’: confessions of satanic riches in Christian Ghana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2011

Extract

In Ghana, as well as in other parts of Africa, pentecostal Churches have recently become extremely popular. Within these Churches reference is made frequently to the devil, who is associated with the non-Christian gods and ghosts as well as Western luxury goods. Present Ghanaian popular culture reveals a striking obsession with images of the devil and of evil. By analysing stories told and published in Ghanaian ‘born again’ circles about money received through a contract with the devil or one of his agents, the author attempts to understand (1) what evil is denounced in these movements by means of the devil, and (2) how, with the help of the notion of the devil, ‘born again’ Christians think about poverty and wealth. It is argued that collective fantasies around the devil have to be understood against the background of difficult socio-economic conditions. These stories entail both a critique of the capitalist economy in the name of the pre-capitalist ideal of mutual family assistance (although a much more limited critique than Taussig suggested in his The Devil and Commodity Fetishism) and an opportunity to fantasise about things people cannot afford but nevertheless desire.

Résumé

Au Ghana aussi bien que dans d'autres parties d'Afrique, les églises de la Pentecôte sont récemment devenues extremement populaires. Dans ces églises on fait fréquemment allusion au diable, qui est associe avec les dieux non-chrétiens et les fantômes aussi bien que les marchandises de luxe occidentales. La culture populaire du Ghana à présent révèle une obsession frappante avec les images du diable et du mal. En analysant des histoires racontées et publiées dans les circles ghanéens de ceux qui ‘ont revécu’ concernant de l'argent reçu par le biais d'un contrat avec le diable ou l'un de ses agents, l'auteur s'efforce de comprendre: 1) quel est le mal qui est denonce dans ces mouvements en se servant du diable, et 2) comment, avec l'aide de la notion du diable, les Chrétiens revécus perçoivent la pauvreté et la richesse.

Cet article affirme que les fantaisies collectives autour du diable doivent être comprises dans un contexte où les conditions socio-économiques sont difficiles. Ces histoires entraînent à la fois une critique de l'économie capitaliste au nom d'un idéal pré-capitaliste d'assistance familiale mutuelle (bien que ce soit une critique beaucoup plus limitée que celle que Taussig suggérait dans The Devil and Commodity Fetichism), et l'occasion de fantasme sur des choses que les gens ne peuvent pas se permettre d'avoir mais désirent néanmoins.

Type
Confessions and cults in West Africa
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Assimeng, Max. 1986. Saints and Social Structures. Tema: Ghana Publishing Corporation.Google Scholar
Austen, Ralph A. 1993. ‘The moral economy of witchcraft: an essay in comparative history’, in J. and Comaroff, J. (eds.), Modernity and its Malcontents: ritual and power in postcolonial Africa, pp. 89110. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Bastian, Misty. 1993. ‘“Bloodhounds who have no friends”: witchcraft and locality in the Nigerian popular press’, in J. and Comaroff, J. (eds.), Modernity and its Malcontents; ritual and power in postcolonial Africa, pp. 129–66. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Bleek, Wolf. 1975. Marriage, Inheritance and Witchcraft: a case study of a rural Ghanaian family. Leiden: Afrika-studiecentrum.Google Scholar
Boyer, Paul, and Nissenbaum, Stephen. 1974. Salem Possessed: the social origins of witchcraft. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Burridge, Kenelm. 1971. New Heaven, New Earth: a study of millenarian activities. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Jean, Comaroff and John, (eds.). 1993. Modernity and its malcontents: ritual and power in postcolonial Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Debrunner, H. 1961. Witchcraft in Ghana: a study in the belief in destructive witches and its effects on the Akan tribes. Accra: Presbyterian Book Depot.Google Scholar
Mary, Douglas (ed.). 1970. Witchcraft: confessions and accusations. London: Tavistock Publications.Google Scholar
Drewal, Henry John. 1988. ‘Performing the Other: Mami Wata worship in Africa’, Drama Review, 32 (2), 160–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edelman, Marc. 1994. ‘Landlords and the devil: class, ethnic, and gender dimensions of Central American peasant narratives’, Current Anthropology 91 (1), 5893.Google Scholar
Eni, Emmanuel. 1988. Deliveredfrom the Powers of Darkness, second edition. Ibadan: Scripture Union.Google Scholar
Fabian, Johannes. 1978. ‘Popular culture in Africa: findings and conjectures’, Africa 48 (4), 315–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Field, Margaret. 1960. Search for Security: an ethno-psychiatric study of rural Ghana. London: Faber.Google Scholar
Fisiy, Cyprian F., and Geschiere, Peter. 1991. ‘Sorcery, witchcraft and accumulation: regional variations in south and west Cameroon’, Critique of Anthropology 11 (3), 251–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garlick, Peter C. 1971. African Traders and Economic Development in Ghana. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Geschiere, Peter, with Fisiy, Cyprian 1995. Sorcellerie et Politique en Afrique: la viande des autres. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Gifford, Paul. 1991. ‘Christian fundamentalism and development’, Review of African Political Economy 52, 920.Google Scholar
Goody, Jack. 1957. ‘Anomie in Ashanti?Africa XXVII, 356–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lattas, Andrew. 1993. ‘Sorcery and colonialism: illness, dreams and death as political languages in west New Britain’, Man (n.s.) 28, 5177.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luig, Ute. 1994. ‘Constructing Local Worlds: spirit possession in the Gwembe valley, Zambia’. Paper for the tenth Satterthwaite colloquium on African Ritual and Religion, 16-19 April.Google Scholar
Marcus, George, and Fischer, Michael M. 1986. Anthropology as a Cultural Critique: an experimental moment in the human sciences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Marshall, Ruth. 1991. ‘Power in the name of Jesus’, Review of African Political Economy 52, 2138.Google Scholar
Marshall, Ruth 1993. ‘“Power in the name of Jesus”: social transformation and pentecostalism in western Nigeria “revisited”’, in Ranger, T. and Vaughan, O. (eds.), Legitimacy and the State in Twentieth Century Africa, pp. 213–46. Basingtoke: Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCaskie, T. C. 1981. ‘Anti-witchcraft cults in Asante: an essay in the social history of an African people’, History in Africa 8, 125–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McLeod, Malcolm. 1975. ‘On the spread of anti-witchcraft cults in modern Asante’, in Goody, J. (ed.), Changing Social Structure in Ghana: essays in the comparative sociology in a new state and an old tradition, pp. 107–17. London: International African Institute.Google Scholar
Meyer, Birgit. 1992. ‘“If you are a devil, you are a witch, and if you are a witch you are a devil”: the integration of “pagan” ideas into the conceptual universe of Ewe Christians in south-eastern Ghana’, Journal of Religion in Africa XXII (2), 98132.Google Scholar
Meyer, Birgit 1994. ‘Beyond syncretism: africanization through translation and diabolization’, in Stewart, C. and Shaw, R. (eds.), Syncretism Anti-syncretism: the politics of religious synthesis, pp. 4567. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Middleton, John. 1983. ‘One hundred and fifty years of Christianity in a Ghanaian town’, Africa 53 (3), 219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Osei-Poku, Kwame. 1989. Blood for Money. Accra: Educational Press.Google Scholar
Parry, J. 1989. ‘On the moral perils of exchange’, in Parry, J. and Bloch, M. (eds.), Money and the Morality of Exchange, pp. 6493. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parry, J., and Bloch, M. (eds). 1989. Money and the Morality of Exchange. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peil, Margaret, with Opoku, K. A.. 1994. ‘The Development and Practice of Religion in an Accra Suburb’. Paper for the tenth Satterthwaite colloquium on African Ritual and Religion, 16-19 April.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberts, Pepe, and Seddon, David. 1991. ‘Fundamentalism in Africa: religion and polities’, Review of African Political Economy 52, 38.Google Scholar
Gillian, Robinson, and Rundell, John. (eds.). 1994. Rethinking Imagination: culture and creativity. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Schneider, Jane. 1990. ‘Spirits and the spirit of capitalism’, in Badone, E. (ed.), Religious Orthodoxy and Popular Faith in European Society, pp. 2453. Princeton N. J.: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Taussig, Michael T. 1980. The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in South America. Chapel Hill N. C.: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Thoden van Velzen, H. U. E. 1994. ‘Revenants that cannot be shaken: collective fantasies in a Maroon society’. Papers in progress, No. 45. Amsterdam: Amsterdam School of Social Science Research.Google Scholar
Thoden van Velzen, H. U. E., and van Wetering, W. 1988. The Great Father and the Danger: religious cults, material forces, and collective fantasies of the Surinamese Maroons. Dordrecht: Foris Publications.Google Scholar
Thoden van Velzen, H. U. E. 1989. ‘Demonologie en de betovering van het moderne leven’, Sociologische Gids XXXVI (3/4), 155–86.Google Scholar
Verrips, Jojada. 1992. ‘Over Vampiers en Virussen: enige reflecties over de antropomorfisering van Kwadd’, Etnofoor 5 (1/2), 2143.Google Scholar
Ward, Barbara E. 1956. ‘Some observations on religious cults in Ashanti’, Africa XXVI, 4161.Google Scholar
Wendl, Tobias. 1991. Mami Wata, oder ein Kult zwischen den Kulturen. Minister: Lit VerlagGoogle Scholar
White, Luise. 1993. ‘Cars out of place: vampires, technology, and labour in East and Central Africa’, Representations 43, 2750.CrossRefGoogle Scholar