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Religion and Custom in a Muslim Society
The Berti of Sudan
This book makes a significant contribution to current anthropological discussion of the interpretation and meaning of rituals and symbols.
Ladislav Holy (Author)
9780521024969, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 13 April 2006
256 pages, 12 b/w illus.
23 x 15.3 x 1.7 cm, 0.386 kg
'… an intriguing monograph about Berti religious and ritual life that opens up dilemmas in the presuppositions inherent in the representations of Muslim societies.' African Affairs
Among the Berti of Northern Darfur (Sudan), as among many Muslim societies, the formal religious practices are predominantly the concern of men, while local, unorthodox customary rituals are performed mainly by women. It is usual to dismiss such local, popular practices as pre-Islamic survivals, but Professor Holy shows that the customary rituals constitute an integral part of the religious system of the Berti. Carefully analysing the symbolic statements made in Berti rituals, Professor Holy demonstrates that the distinction between the two classes of rituals is an expression of the gender relationships characteristic of the society. He also examines the social distribution of knowledge about Islam, and explains the role of the religious schools in sustaining religious ideas. The work is not only an ethnographic study of ritual, belief and gender in an African society. It also makes a significant contribution to current anthropological discussion of the interpretation and meaning of rituals and symbols.
Preface and acknowledgements
Introduction
1. The Berti and Islam
2. Men and women
3. Milk and water
4. Village and wilderness
5. Custom and religion
6. Life cycle
7. Circumcision
8. Blood and rain
9. Custom and superstition
Glossary
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC]
