Abstract
This article argues that rural South African women's importance as spiritual actors in the period from the late nineteenth through the mid-twentieth centuries stemmed from their ability to embrace hybrid spiritual identities that corresponded closely to the lived reality of African rural life, and that by embracing those identities, women expanded their roles as social healers. Professing a belief in Christianity did not prevent individuals from practicing as diviners, nor did it prevent Christians from consulting diviners to determine the causes of death or misfortune. Similarly, young women who converted to Christianity often maintained close ties to non-Christian families and bridged spiritual lives on the mission stations with life in their families. Over this time period, women became cultural mediators who borrowed, adopted, and combined spiritual beliefs to provide more complete answers to problems faced by rural African families in South Africa.
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CITATION STYLE
Redding, S. (2016, November 1). WOMEN AS DIVINERS and AS CHRISTIAN CONVERTS in RURAL SOUTH AFRICA, c. 1880-1963. Journal of African History. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021853716000086
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