"The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy

During 1994 and 1995 major-crime emergency response police (Soweto Flying Squad) in the largest black township in South Africa noticed and frequently discussed a rise in the number of witchcraft-related complaints, incidents and requests for assistance. In that time of transition and deep cultural a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wardrop, Joan
Other Authors: Burghard Schmidt
Format: Book Chapter
Published: DOBU Verlag 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41992
_version_ 1848756295837941760
author Wardrop, Joan
author2 Burghard Schmidt
author_facet Burghard Schmidt
Wardrop, Joan
author_sort Wardrop, Joan
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description During 1994 and 1995 major-crime emergency response police (Soweto Flying Squad) in the largest black township in South Africa noticed and frequently discussed a rise in the number of witchcraft-related complaints, incidents and requests for assistance. In that time of transition and deep cultural anxiety, the atmosphere in Soweto was often seething with resentments and concerns which had been suppressed during the apartheid years of oppression but which now bubbled to the surface in often unexpected ways, exemplified in the two contradictory statements in this paper's title, each made by a middle-aged woman, two days apart in contiguous areas of the township. In doing extended fieldwork with Soweto Flying Squad, the author listened to the explanations and narratives that local people were constructing, both about the existence of otherwise unexplainable phenomena, and about the responses of neighbours, families, friends and enemies to the accusations made against particular people (most often women). In these narratives lie detailed accounts and understandings of the complex travails of rapid political and social change, underscored by the interwoven and often-contradictory expressions of multiple belief systems. Through an experience-near, highly contextualised ethnographic examination of several accusatory events from 1994 and 1995, the author explores the interlocking roles of narrative, gender and class, in processes of accusation in Soweto.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:09:56Z
format Book Chapter
id curtin-20.500.11937-41992
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:09:56Z
publishDate 2007
publisher DOBU Verlag
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-419922022-11-21T05:19:42Z "The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy Wardrop, Joan Burghard Schmidt Rolf Schulte During 1994 and 1995 major-crime emergency response police (Soweto Flying Squad) in the largest black township in South Africa noticed and frequently discussed a rise in the number of witchcraft-related complaints, incidents and requests for assistance. In that time of transition and deep cultural anxiety, the atmosphere in Soweto was often seething with resentments and concerns which had been suppressed during the apartheid years of oppression but which now bubbled to the surface in often unexpected ways, exemplified in the two contradictory statements in this paper's title, each made by a middle-aged woman, two days apart in contiguous areas of the township. In doing extended fieldwork with Soweto Flying Squad, the author listened to the explanations and narratives that local people were constructing, both about the existence of otherwise unexplainable phenomena, and about the responses of neighbours, families, friends and enemies to the accusations made against particular people (most often women). In these narratives lie detailed accounts and understandings of the complex travails of rapid political and social change, underscored by the interwoven and often-contradictory expressions of multiple belief systems. Through an experience-near, highly contextualised ethnographic examination of several accusatory events from 1994 and 1995, the author explores the interlocking roles of narrative, gender and class, in processes of accusation in Soweto. 2007 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41992 DOBU Verlag restricted
spellingShingle Wardrop, Joan
"The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy
title "The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy
title_full "The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy
title_fullStr "The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy
title_full_unstemmed "The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy
title_short "The witch. She is in her house"--"We don't have witches here. Not in Soweto": Soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy
title_sort "the witch. she is in her house"--"we don't have witches here. not in soweto": soweto witchcraft accusations in the transition from apartheid through liberation to democracy
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41992