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Invitation to research colloquium
Tuesday | 2.15 pm | Campus: S 125 GW I
We would like to cordially invite you to the Research Colloquium of the Master Program African Verbal and Visual Arts. Please find here the full schedule.
If you would like to attend this presentation online, please email brady.c.blackburn@uni-bayreuth.de to request the Zoom link. In the upcoming colloquium, On May 13th, PhD student at Shanghai International Studies University, Ma Jun will present on
The Resilience of Witchcraft: A Discussion on the Traditional Order Reflected in Safari ya Lamu in the Swahili Region
As the oldest known mystical ritual in human history, witchcraft has not retreated from human history with the advancement of technology, but rather continues to coexist with human communities in an unimaginable resilience. Whether in Asia or Africa, witchcraft still holds a place in modern societies dominated by technology.
Taking East Africa as an example, since the introduction of Christianity to Ethiopia in the 4th century AD, monotheistic beliefs have become a norm in East Africa today. However, elements such as animism, ancestor worship, idolatry, and witchcraft, which should conflict with religious doctrines, have not disappeared in the region with the spread of Islam or Christianity.
On the contrary, these traditional orders have been embedded within local communities, thus shaping a unique socio-cultural structure specific to East Africa. In the novel Safari ya Lamu (The Journey of Lamu), Kenyan writer John Hamu Habwe presents a fascinating story through the protagonist Musa, depicting how a young man from the Kenyan hinterland struggles against the authoritative representative of the local traditional order - mchawi (the wizard) - in the Swahili region, which belongs to a different cultural community.
This presentation conducts a textual analysis of the conflicts between the protagonist Musa and the wizard Mkuki in the novel, combining the historical development of witchcraft and indigenous African traditions in the Swahili region, and discusses the powerful resilience of African traditional orders in the face of the impact of foreign cultures.
Based on the social resilience of traditional orders represented by witchcraft in Africa, this article also discusses the further "Africanization" trend of Swahili culture in the future and the role of traditional orders in the modernization process in East Africa.