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Among the Tuareg people in the Air Mountain region of Niger, women are sometimes possessed by spirits called 'the people of solitude'. The evening curing rituals of the possessed, featuring drumming and song, take place before an audience of young men and women, who joke and flirt as the ritual unfolds. In her analysis of this tolerated but unofficial cult, Susan Rasmussen analyses symbolism and aesthetic values, provides case studies of possessed women, and reviews what local people think about the meaning of possession.
Spirit possession --- Tuaregs --- Women, Tuareg --- Possession par les esprits --- Touaregs --- Femmes touaregs --- Religion --- Religious life --- Vie religieuse --- Religion. --- Religious life. --- #SBIB:39A73 --- #SBIB:39A9 --- -Spirit possession --- -Women, Tuareg --- -Tuareg women --- Possession, Spirit --- Experience (Religion) --- Tuariks --- Berbers --- Ethnology --- Etnografie: Afrika --- Medische antropologie / gezondheid / handicaps --- -Etnografie: Afrika --- Tuareg women --- Social Sciences --- Anthropology
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"A twenty-five-year veteran of field research in Niger and Mali, anthropologist Susan J. Rasmussen examines the female-dominated practice of herbalism in the seminomadic Muslim communities of Tuareg. Medicine women, known as tinesmegelen, diagnose by touch and treat their patients - mostly women and children - with leaves, bark, and roots from trees associated with ancestral spirits. In addition to healing, they relate oral traditions, offer marital counseling, protect patients against potential domestic violence, and practice divination." "Rasmussen draws the reader into this fascinating world of medicine women through interviews, guided conversations, life histories, illustrative case studies, and, most importantly, the words of the healers and their patients. As a participant-observer, she shares her own experiences with descriptions of the treatments she herself received. Then, moving from a focused analysis to a broader contextual frame, she addresses central questions in anthropology about gender, knowledge, and the interface between religion and medicine."--Résumé de l'éditeur.
Women, Tuareg --- Muslim women --- Women shamans --- Women healers --- Herbs --- Traditional medicine --- Femmes touaregs --- Musulmanes --- Femmes chamanes --- Guérisseuses --- Herbes --- Médecine populaire --- Medicine --- Ethnobotany --- Rites and ceremonies --- Therapeutic use --- Médecine --- Ethnobotanique --- Rites et cérémonies --- Emploi en thérapeutique --- Guérisseuses --- Médecine populaire --- Médecine --- Rites et cérémonies --- Emploi en thérapeutique --- Tuareg women --- Medicine women --- Shamanesses --- Curanderas --- Ethnic medicine --- Ethnomedicine --- Folk medicine --- Home cures --- Home medicine --- Home remedies --- Indigenous medicine --- Medical folklore --- Medicine, Primitive --- Primitive medicine --- Surgery, Primitive --- Islamic women --- Women, Muslim --- Shamans --- Healers --- Women in medicine --- Alternative medicine --- Folklore --- Medical anthropology --- Ethnopharmacology --- Women --- Plants, Useful --- Forbs --- #SBIB:39A9 --- #SBIB:39A10 --- #SBIB:39A73 --- Medische antropologie / gezondheid / handicaps --- Antropologie: religie, riten, magie, hekserij --- Etnografie: Afrika --- Muslimahs
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Tuaregs --- Traditional medicine --- Healing --- Medical anthropology --- Touaregs --- Médecine populaire --- Guérison --- Anthropologie médicale --- Medicine --- Health and hygiene --- Santé et hygiène --- Niger --- Social life and customs --- Moeurs et coutumes
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Persons of Courage and Renown is a theoretically engaged ethnography by a social/cultural anthropologist that explores issues of culture, memory, creativity, and power by analyzing beloved, yet vulnerable, actors, acting, and play performances in Tamajaq-speaking, predominantly Muslim, traditionally stratified, and semi-nomadic Tuareg communities in northern Mali. The town and region of Kidal are the primary sites of field research. This book traces how Tuareg actors powerfully negotiate cultural memory and encounters in communities caught, between political violence and peacekeeping efforts in northern Mali. Urban, state, and nongovernmental bureaucracies there seek to reshape Tuareg verbal art performances to comply with official agendas aimed at transforming local culture. This book shows how acting and plays are crucial in continuing, but also debating and redefining, the meanings of older verbal art performances of Tuareg tales, songs, and epics, as well as wider cultural knowledge and social practice. Their arts offer important possibilities for peacemaking in a turbulent and unpredictable world.
Tuaregs --- Theater --- Collective memory in literature --- Social life and customs --- History and criticism --- History
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