Sorcery and the Moral Economy of Agency: An Ethnographic Account

An ethnographic account of sorcery accusation, violence, and subsequent community discussion provides a basis to explore the 'moral economy of agency' that shapes expressions and interpretations of personhood in Vanuatu. Mediated historically by transforming social, political, and economic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oceania 2015-03, Vol.85 (1), p.38-50
1. Verfasser: Taylor, John P.
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description An ethnographic account of sorcery accusation, violence, and subsequent community discussion provides a basis to explore the 'moral economy of agency' that shapes expressions and interpretations of personhood in Vanuatu. Mediated historically by transforming social, political, and economic circumstances, agency is demonstrated to be patterned according to culturally specific ontological and moral schemes. Key local categories of embodied personhood — including man pies (man place), man wan (man one), and jelus (jealousy) — are examined to elucidate two relationally entwined analytic categories, referred to as 'distributive' and 'possessive' agency. Such categories, it is argued, fundamentally shape expressions and interpretations of moral being and doing, including by providing a basis for identifying morally abject expressions of personhood. Taking seriously the important role of spiritual agency within such moral economies, this paper provides new ethnographically grounded insights into the ways in which communities and individuals negotiate moral being within transforming contexts of economic and sacred power.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects affect
Affect (Psychology)
Agency
Agent (Philosophy)
Community
Cultural sensitivity
Demonstrations
Economics
Ethnography
Historical account
Jealousy
Moral agency
moral economy
Morality
Morals
Negotiation
Personhood
Politics
Power
Social aspects
Sorcery
Spirit possession
Spirituality
Violence
Witchcraft
title Sorcery and the Moral Economy of Agency: An Ethnographic Account
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