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Lowcountry Conjure Magic
Historical Archaeology on a Plantation Slave Quarter

This Element shows conjure magic deposits found on historical rice plantation slave quarter dating from the eighteenth to twentieth century.

Sharon K. Moses (Author)

9781009539395, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 30 January 2025

84 pages
23.6 x 15.9 x 1.2 cm, 0.27 kg

Cat Island, South Carolina, was once the location of slave trade activities, including capture of Native Americans for export and the rise of plantations in the Lowcountry for indigo and rice production, from the sixteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries. This Element examines the Hume Plantation Slave Street Project led by the author, and archaeological evidence for hoodoo magic and ritual practices involving “white magic” spells used for protection and treatments for illness and injury, and, alternately, for 'black magic,' in spells used to exact harm or to kill. This Element is intended as a contribution to the collective knowledge about hoodoo magic practices in the Lowcountry, centered on the Hume Plantation grounds during this period of American history. It is an attempt to examine how attitudes and practices may have changed over time and concludes with a look at select contemporary hoodoo activities conducted in local cemeteries.

1. Introduction
2. Beginnings of slave trade in Winyah Bay: Native Americans, Spanish, and British interactions, sixteenth eighteenth centuries
3. Hoodoo rituals: hiding in plain sight
4. Transformation of the slave street over time
5. Evolution of lowcountry hoodoo
6. Conclusion: conjure men and women traditions into the twenty-first century
References.

Subject Areas: Religion: general [HRA]

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