Abstract
The elaborate mortuary rites of the Chitimukulu (the paramount chief of the Bemba people) attracted the attention of both colonial administrators and anthropologists in inter-war Northern Rhodesia. This paper examines the political and symbolic significance of these rites before turning to an analysis of accounts, by the anthropologist Audrey Richards, of the deaths of two 'commoners' in the 1930s. The paper argues that chiefly power resided less in the threat of death which was enacted spectacularly in the Chitimukulu's mortuary rituals than in the promise to create and protect life, located in the practices of quotidian life. This promise of the creation and protection of life was being progressively undermined by the conditions of colonial rule. © 2008 Cambridge University Press.
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Vaughan, M. (2008). “Divine kings”: Sex, death and anthropology in inter-war east/central africa. Journal of African History, 49(3), 383–401. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021853708003654
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