In the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa, chronic economic uncertainty has seen social relations stretched to breaking point. Informants speak of a 'war between men and women'. While grinding poverty, death in the shape of the 'axe' (HIV/AIDS) and suspicion stalk the land, and the project of building the umzi (homestead) falters, hope for the future and with it, trust between people, leaches away. One response to such uncertainty is a turn to ritual. Through a nearly relentless schedule of ritual activity which invokes the ancestors and the Christian deity in various forms, Xhosa people attempt to dam up trust, secure ongoing investment in the rural homestead and sustain ties of reciprocity both among rural people and between them and t...
Among the AmaXhosa the death of a person is marked by a tradition called ukuzila - the equivalent of...
This study examines the breakdown in Xhosa-speaking cultural, economic, and political structures tha...
Bibliography: pages 177-190.This ethnographic study of Nieu Bethesda, a village in the Eastern Cape ...
In this chapter, I explore how rural and urban-based women and men – through their selective engagem...
From conclusion: This study has had a twofold objective, to present ethnographic data on a people wh...
Although studies of migration have grown exponentially in recent years, their focus has for the most...
For many rural people in South Africa, the period 1994 to 2004 has been fraught with economic uncert...
Why do some rituals disappear while others continue to be performed? Why do some persist in a relati...
Ancestral belief is central to such an extent to the world view of many cultural groups in South Afr...
[From the introduction]: Why do some rituals disappear while others continue to be performed? Why do...
Rituals have been performed within South African communities since the first inhabitants, the Khoisa...
In post-apartheid South Africa witchcraft is an ever-growing concern, as political liberation has no...
Decimated and dispossessed, the Khoisan of South Africa were assimilated alongside several others in...
Bibliography: pages. 106-111.This thesis came as a result of two years' research in ten households i...
Includes bibliographical references.This research into the religious outlooks of two Xhosa prophets ...
Among the AmaXhosa the death of a person is marked by a tradition called ukuzila - the equivalent of...
This study examines the breakdown in Xhosa-speaking cultural, economic, and political structures tha...
Bibliography: pages 177-190.This ethnographic study of Nieu Bethesda, a village in the Eastern Cape ...
In this chapter, I explore how rural and urban-based women and men – through their selective engagem...
From conclusion: This study has had a twofold objective, to present ethnographic data on a people wh...
Although studies of migration have grown exponentially in recent years, their focus has for the most...
For many rural people in South Africa, the period 1994 to 2004 has been fraught with economic uncert...
Why do some rituals disappear while others continue to be performed? Why do some persist in a relati...
Ancestral belief is central to such an extent to the world view of many cultural groups in South Afr...
[From the introduction]: Why do some rituals disappear while others continue to be performed? Why do...
Rituals have been performed within South African communities since the first inhabitants, the Khoisa...
In post-apartheid South Africa witchcraft is an ever-growing concern, as political liberation has no...
Decimated and dispossessed, the Khoisan of South Africa were assimilated alongside several others in...
Bibliography: pages. 106-111.This thesis came as a result of two years' research in ten households i...
Includes bibliographical references.This research into the religious outlooks of two Xhosa prophets ...
Among the AmaXhosa the death of a person is marked by a tradition called ukuzila - the equivalent of...
This study examines the breakdown in Xhosa-speaking cultural, economic, and political structures tha...
Bibliography: pages 177-190.This ethnographic study of Nieu Bethesda, a village in the Eastern Cape ...