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Bantu Beliefs and Magic - with particular reference to the Kikuyu and Kamba tribes of Kenya colony; together with some reflections on east Africa after the war (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,693
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Bantu Beliefs and Magic - with particular reference to the Kikuyu and Kamba tribes of Kenya colony; together with some reflections on east Africa after the war (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Revivals
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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First published in 1922, the author of this book was for many years
a Provincial Commissioner of what was then the Kenya Colony whose
main objects were to place on record the results of investigations
made among the native tribes in British East Africa, particularly
among the Kikuyu and Kamba people, and to endeavour from a study of
their ceremonial with regard to sacrifice and taboo, to obtain a
better insight into the principles which underlie the outward forms
and ceremonies of their ritual. Together with natural religion and
magic, the author discusses a variety of social activities
influenced by religious beliefs, such as the organisation of
councils, ceremonial oaths, war and peace, dances, legends, and the
position of women in tribal society. The functions of some of the
practices are self-evident or can be explained within the limits of
psychological or anthropological terms, whilst others remain
unexplained and seem inexplicable, even futile. The author's
careful analysis of this last class provides interesting
ethnological comment, for in seeking a better understanding of the
psychology of one particular race, he draws attention also to
analogous conditions of religious customs existing amongst other
widely differing races. In the last chapter, 'Quo Vadis', added to
the second edition of 1938, the author furthers his discussion of
East Africa after the war. Together with the factual analysis of
the first three parts, these additional observations, invaluable
once to administrators and all concerned in colonial government,
today prove their value not only for students of East Africa, but
for all those endeavouring to arrive at an adjustment between the
old native social structure and the extraneous forces now operating
with ever increasing intensity.
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