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Journal ArticleDOI

Occult economies and the violence of abstraction: notes from the South African postcolony

Jean Comaroff, +1 more
- 01 May 1999 - 
- Vol. 26, Iss: 2, pp 279-303
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TLDR
This paper argued that the major lines of opposition have been not race or class but generation, mediated by gender, and that the encounter of rural South Africa with the contradictory effects of millennial capitalism and the culture of neoliberalism brings "the global" and "the local" into a dialectical interplay.
Abstract
Postcolonial 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 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,

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Journal ArticleDOI

Millennial Capitalism: First Thoughts on a Second Coming

Jean Comaroff, +1 more
- 01 May 2000 - 
TL;DR: The second coming of capitalism raises a number of conundrums for our understanding of history at the end of the century as discussed by the authors, and some of its corollaries have been the subject of clamorous debate.
Journal ArticleDOI

African modes of self-writing

Achille Mbembe
- 01 Jan 2002 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, auteur essaie de demontrer qu’il n’existe pas d’identite africaine that l’on peut designer par un seul terme ou ranger sous une seule rubrique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond the ethnic lens: Locality, globality, and born-again incorporation

TL;DR: This paper examined born-again Christianity as a means of migrant incorporation locally and transnationally in two small-scale cities, one in the United States and the other in Germany, and examined the role of city scale in shaping migrant pathways of settlement and transnational connection.
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Capitalism and Autochthony: The Seesaw of Mobility and Belonging

TL;DR: The most striking aspect of recent developments in Africa is that democratization seems to trigger a general obsession with autochthony and ethnic citizenship invariably defined against "strangers" as mentioned in this paper.
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Toward an Anthropology of Public Policy

TL;DR: In a rapidly changing world, anthropologists' empirical and ethnographic methods can show how policies actively create new categories of individuals to be governed as mentioned in this paper, and they also suggest that the long-established frameworks of "state" and "private, "local", "national", "macro", and "micro", "top-down", "bottom-up, " and "centralized" not only fail to capture current dynamics in the world but actually obf...
References
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MonographDOI

Of Revelation and Revolution, Volume 2: The Dialectics of Modernity on a South African Frontier

TL;DR: The Dialectics of Modernity on a South African Frontier is discussed in this article, where the authors move beyond the realm of "the long conversation" to examine changes in the material realities and notions of production, value, dress, architecture, medicine, and rights.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of a social situation in modern zululand

Max Gluckman
- 01 Jan 1940 - 
TL;DR: In this article, an analysis of a social site in modern ZULULAND is presented. But this analysis is limited to the context of Bantu studies: Vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 1-30.