
Rituals Combining Healing With Spirit Possession And Court-like Proceedings Are Found Around The World And Throughout History. For Example, A Person Suffers From An Illness That Cannot Be Cured, And In Order To Be Healed He Performs A Ritual Involving Prosecution And Defense, A Judge And Witnesses. Divine Beings Give Evidence Through Human Oracles, Spirits Possess Their Human Victims And Are Exorcized, And Local Gods Intervene To Provide Healing And Justice. Such Practices Seem To Be The Very Antithesis Of Modernity And Many Modern, Secular States Have Systematically Attempted To Eliminate Them. Why Are Such Rituals Largely Absent From Modern Societies, And What Happens To Them When The State Attempts To Expunge Them From Their Health And Justice Systems, Or Even To Criminalize Them? Despite The Prevalence Of Rituals Involving Some Or All Of These Elements, The Law Of Possession Represents The First Attempt To Compare And Analyze Them Systematically. The Volume Brings Together Historical And Contemporary Case Studies From East Asia, South Asia, And Africa, And Argues That, Despite Consistent Attempts By States To Discourage, Eliminate, And Criminalize Them, Such Rituals Persist And Even Thrive Because They Meet Widespread Human Needs.
This volume investigates why rituals combining healing with spirit possession and court-like proceedings persist despite systematic efforts by modern secular states to eliminate or criminalize them. The authors, Helene Basu and William S. Sax, curate a collection of interdisciplinary research to examine the intersection of traditional spiritual practices and state-sanctioned legal and health systems. By analyzing the functional role these rituals play in addressing human needs, the text argues that such practices remain resilient even when faced with institutional opposition.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and anthropologists recognize this work as a foundational comparative study on the persistence of ritualized justice in the face of state secularization. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for researchers and students of cultural anthropology.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190275766
ISBN-13:
9780190275761
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