Living in Peril: Witchcraft Suppression in the Northern Province, South Africa in the Twentieth Century Público
Sandlin, Kate (Spring 2020)
Abstract
This thesis examines the prerogatives and anxieties that underwrote twentieth century witchcraft suppression legislation in the Northern Province of South Africa. I analyze witchcraft’s place in the political imaginaries of colonial, apartheid, and post-apartheid states and how witchcraft suppression policies weaponized their biases. More broadly, this thesis explores the subjectivity of evil, suffering, and fear.
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Way of the World or The Way of Yours? 1
Chapter 1: Never Fear, the British are Here: Witchcraft Suppression in the Early-Twentieth Century 8
Chapter 2: Witchcraft Suppression and White Supremacy in the Age of Apartheid 27
Chapter 3: Which Side are You on: The Ralushai Commission and the ANC’s Witchcraft Problem 42
Conclusion: Dammed if You Do and Dammed if You Don’t: Witchcraft Suppression Post- Apartheid 57
Bibliography 64
About this Honors Thesis
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