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The Sublime Dance of Mende Politics: An African Aesthetic of Charismatic Power

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The Sublime Dance of Mende Politics: An African Aesthetic of Charismatic Power
Author(s)Murphy, William P.
AbstractIn this ethnography of politics, the theory of the sublime is used to clarify the aesthetics of power among the Mende of Sierra Leone. A key formal dimension of this aesthetics is the dialectic of extraordinary visible effects caused by powerful hidden means, which is analyzed through the cultural analogy of dance and politics. This dialectic is also shown to link the aesthetics of the sublime with the politics of charisma as expressing similar logics of expressive power. Aesthetics is treated as an ethnographic heuristic for understanding political power and agency. The Mende political sublime raises broader questions for social theory about the relationship between aesthetics and agency as modeled by the opposition in aesthetic theory between beauty and the sublime. It also addresses the implications of this aesthetic opposition for the typology of agency found in the periodization of premodern, modern, and postmodern social conditions.
IssueNo4
Pages563-564
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAmerican Ethnologist
VolumeNo25
PubDateNovember 1998
ISBN_ISSN0094-0496

Political Practices, Organization, and Structure

  • Anthropology and Public Policy
  • Autonomy and Self-Determination
  • Civil Society and the State
  • Institutions
  • Nation, State, and Tribe
  • Politics, Power, and Culture


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