Fetichism in West Africa

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Fetichism in West Africa: Forty Years' Observation of Native Customs and Superstitions is a book by the Reverend Robert Hamill Nassau, a missionary, published in 1904. It is one of the earliest studies of traditional religion on West Africa.[1]

Fetich Magician with horns, wooden mask, spear, and sword, dress of leaves of palm and plantain. Frontispiece from Fetichism in West Africa: Forty Years' Observations of Native Customs and Superstitions.

The book relates the facts which Nassau claims to have discovered over the course of many years concerning traditional religions and the practice of sorcery in West Africa and how it related to the everyday lives of the people of that region. John Cinnamon suggests that 'when Nassau was able to refrain from the constant, invidious comparison between enlightened Christian truth and degraded African wickedness, his observations contain glimmers of ethnographic insight'.[2]

A Mpongwe woman, Anyentyuwe, was one of Nassau's principal informants for Fetichism in West Africa.[3] She was a teacher and servant at Baraka Mission, Gabon.

References[edit]

  1. ^ World Missionary Conference (1910). World Missionary Conference, 1910 (to consider missionary problems in relation to the non-christian world). Oliphant Anderson & Ferrier. OCLC 176895311.
  2. ^ Harries, Patrick; Maxwell, David (2012). The spiritual in the secular : missionaries and knowledge about Africa. W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co. ISBN 9780802866349. OCLC 774490026.
  3. ^ Cinnamon, John M. (2006). Missionary expertise, social science, and the uses of ethnographic knowledge in colonial Gabon. OCLC 775287246.

External links[edit]