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Witchcraft Explains Unfortunate Events Summary

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Sir E. E. Evans-Pritchard was an anthropologist and Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oxford. His most notable work was Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic Among the Azande in which he details the applications and understanding of witchcraft and other similar ideas of a culture group in North Central Africa. The main argument of the second chapter The Notion of Witchcraft Explains Unfortunate Events is the Zande use the explanation of witchcraft as a means of attributing cause to misfortune that is separate from the obvious/objective cause of the event. Given the information presented in this chapter, I would say that I agree with Evans-Pritchard’s assessment that the Zande use witchcraft to attribute cause to their misfortune. While the Zande are familiar with concepts such as carelessness, incompetence, and even natural misfortune, when it comes into factoring in coincidence, they supplant the notion of witchcraft. Instead of coincidental causal phenomena, the Zande maintain there is no coincidence in misfortune as it happens as a direct result of witchcraft. The …show more content…

The difficulty lay with Evans-Pritchard’s initial ethnocentrism in early observations, as there is little familiar cultural context to pull from with regard to the active role of witchcraft in day-to-day life. Evans-Pritchard also notes, “Witchcraft participates in all misfortunes and is the idiom in which Azande speak about them and in which they explain them.”

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