Affiliation:
1. Department of Sociology & Anthropology, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria
2. Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA
Abstract
From the colonial days, the dibia (folk practitioner) in the Igbo-speaking southeast of Nigeria, as elsewhere, has been maligned by hegemonic Christianity and biomedicine. The consequent public reluctance to openly pursue indigenous healing remains a core part of the challenges to patronage the dibia has had to navigate. Drawing empirical materials from the Igbo town of Nsukka, this ethnographic account narrates how the dibia not only resists these hegemonic forces but even instrumentalizes their allures to advance folk healing. This I term forward or offensive agency, as against inclined or defensive agency along which lines decolonial and postcolonial discourses have ordinarily framed patterns of local reaction in much of today's South. In offensive agency, a smokescreen of change is projected by the locale, indicating, to an external eye, that change has happened while the core of the epistemic sphere in question remains shielded behind that façade of cosmetic change.
Funder
Harvard Radcliffe Institute
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,Development,Cultural Studies
Cited by
1 articles.
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