Contact Us
linkedin
twitter
  • ABOUT SSL
    • History
    • Contributors
  • DISCIPLINES
    • Anthropology
    • Economics
    • History
    • Philosophy
    • Political Science
    • Social Psychology
    • Sociology
  • SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
    • Evolving Values for a Capitalist World
    • Frontier Issues in Economic Thought
    • Galbraith Series
    • Global History
  • NEWSLETTER

Occult Economies and the Violence of Abstraction: Notes from the South African Postcolony

  1. Home
  2. >>
  3. Anthropology
  4. >>
  5. Social/Cultural Anthropology
  6. >>
  7. Subsistence and Economic Practices,...
  8. >>
  9. Economics and Culture
  10. >>
  11. Occult Economies and the...
Occult Economies and the Violence of Abstraction: Notes from the South African Postcolony
Author(s)Comaroff, Jean; Comaroff, John
AbstractPostcolonial South Africa, like other postrevolutionary societies, appears to have witnessed a dramatic rise in occult economies: in the deployment, real or imagined, of magical means for material ends. These embrace a wide range of phenomena, from “ritual murder,” the sale of body parts, and the putative production of zombies to pyramid schemes and other financial scams. And they have led, in many places, to violent reactions against people accused of illicit accumulation. In the struggles that have ensued, the major lines of opposition have been not race or class but generation – mediated by gender. Why is all of this occurring with such intensity, right now? An answer to the question, and to the more general problem of making sense of the enchantments of modernity, is sought in the encounter of rural South Africa with the contradictory effects of millennial capitalism and the culture of neoliberalism. This encounter, goes the argument, brings “the global” and “the local” – treated here as analytic constructs rather than explanatory terms or empirical realities – into a dialectical interplay. It also has implications for the practice of anthropology, challenging us to do ethnography on an “awkward” scale, on planes that transect the here and now, then and there.
IssueNo2
Pages279-303
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAmerican Ethnologist
VolumeNo26
PubDateMay 1999
ISBN_ISSN0094-0496

Subsistence and Economic Practices, Organization, and Structure

  • Economics and Culture
  • Sustainability and Development
  • Wealth and Poverty


Boston University | ECI | Contact Us

Copyright Notification: The Social Science Library (SSL) is for distribution in a defined set of countries. The complete list may be found here. Free distribution within these countries is encouraged, but copyright law forbids distribution outside of these countries.