Across Africa, funerals and events remembering the dead have become larger and even more numerous over the years. Whereas in the West death is normally a private and family affair, in Africa funerals are often the central life cycle event, unparalleled in cost and importance, for which families harness vast amounts of resources to host lavish events for multitudes of people with ramifications well beyond the event. Though officials may try to regulate them, the popularity of these events often makes such efforts fruitless, and the elites themselves spend tremendously on funerals. This volume brings together scholars who have conducted research on funerary events across sub-Saharan Africa. The contributions offer an in-depth understanding of the broad changes and underlying causes in African societies over the years, such as changes in religious beliefs, social structure, urbanization, and technological changes and health.
Tabla de materias
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Jan Vansina
Introduction: Funerals in Africa. An Introduction
Michael Jindra and Joël Noret
Chapter 1. African Funerals and Sociocultural Change: A Review of Momentous Transformations across a Continent
Michael Jindra and Joël Noret
Chapter 2. A Decent Death: Changes in Burial in Bulawayo
Terence Ranger
Chapter 3. Kikuyu Transformation of Death in Kenya: From Hyenas to Tombs
Yvan Droz
Chapter 4. Decomposing Pollution? Corpses, Burials, and Affliction among the Meru of Central Kenya
Mark Lamont
Chapter 5. The Rise of Death Celebrations in the Cameroon Grassfields
Michael Jindra
Chapter 6. Funerals and Religious Pluralism in Burkina Faso
Katrin Langewiesche
Chapter 7. Funerals and the Religious Imagination: Burying and Honoring the Dead in the Celestial Church of Christ (Southern Benin)
Joël Noret
Chapter 8. Of Corpses, Clay, and Photographs: Body Imagery and Changing Technologies of Remembrance in Asante Funeral Culture
Marleen de Witte
Chapter 9. Funerals and Fetish Interment in Accra, Ghana
Jonathan Roberts
Notes on the Contributors
Bibliography
Index
Sobre el autor
Joël Noret is Assistant Professor of anthropology at the Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium. He has been conducting fieldwork in southern Benin since the beginning of the 2000s. His publications include the co-edited special issue of Gradhiva, Mémoire de l’esclavage au Bénin (with Gaetano Ciarcia, 2008), his monograph, Deuil et funérailles dans le Bénin méridional. Enterrer à tout prix (Brussels, 2010), and Mort et dynamiques sociales au Katanga (with Pierre Petit, Tervuren-Paris, 2011).