1st Edition
Catastrophe and Creation The transformation of an African culture
By K. Elkholm Friedmann
Copyright 1992
284 Pages
by
Routledge
284 Pages
by
Routledge
284 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
First Published in 1992. This is a study of what happened to Kongo society and culture at the turn of the 20th century, when the area was penetrated, brutally violated and colonized by Europeans. This book is the outcome of a project called Society and Culture in Crisis whereby the author found that evolution was a continuous, more or less unbroken process only at the global system level, whereas repeated rises and falls took place at the local level. This study closely looks at the declining development process in the Lower Congo and calls to the effects of colonization on society and culture.
Introduction World process and the production of culture; Part 1 Transformation of the social order; Chapter 1 The factory system; Chapter 2 Catastrophe and creation; Part 2 Personhood and the dynamics of culture; Chapter 3 The constitution of the person and the externality of power; Part 3 Transformation of the cultural order; Chapter 4 From religion to magic; Chapter 5 Witchcraft as imaginary cannibalism; Chapter 6 Cannibalism and the loss of political power; Conclusion;
Biography
Friedmann, K. Elkholm