Cloth $53.00 ISBN: 9780226764573 Published September 2008
Paper $22.50 ISBN: 9780226764580 Published September 2008
E-book $7.00 to $22.50 About E-books ISBN: 9780226764597 Published October 2009

Bewitching Development

Witchcraft and the Reinvention of Development in Neoliberal Kenya

James Howard Smith

James Howard Smith

272 pages | 5 halftones, 3 line drawings | 6 x 9 | © 2008
Cloth $53.00 ISBN: 9780226764573 Published September 2008
Paper $22.50 ISBN: 9780226764580 Published September 2008
E-book $7.00 to $22.50 About E-books ISBN: 9780226764597 Published October 2009
These days, development inspires scant trust in the West. For critics who condemn centralized efforts to plan African societies as latter day imperialism, such plans too closely reflect their roots in colonial rule and neoliberal economics. But proponents of this pessimistic view often ignore how significant this concept has become for Africans themselves. In Bewitching Development, James Howard Smith presents a close ethnographic account of how people in the Taita Hills of Kenya have appropriated and made sense of development thought and practice, focusing on the complex ways that development connects with changing understandings of witchcraft.

Similar to magic, development’s promise of a better world elicits both hope and suspicion from Wataita. Smith shows that the unforeseen changes wrought by development—greater wealth for some, dashed hopes for many more—foster moral debates that Taita people express in occult terms. By carefully chronicling the beliefs and actions of this diverse community—from frustrated youths to nostalgic seniors, duplicitous preachers to thought-provoking witch doctors—Bewitching Development vividly depicts the social life of formerly foreign ideas and practices in postcolonial Africa.
Contents

Preface

Chapter One: Bewitching Development: The Disintegration and Reinvention of Development in Kenya

Chapter Two: I Still Exist! Taita Historicity

Chapter Three: Development’s Other: Witchcraft as Development through the Looking Glass

Chapter Four: “Each Household Is a Kingdom”: Development and Witchcraft at Home

Chapter Five: “Dot Com Will Die Seriously!” Spatiotemporal Miscommunication and Competing Sovereignties in Taita Thought and Ritual

Chapter Six: Development, Witchcraft, and the Sovereign Child

Chapter Seven: Democracy Victorious: Exorcising Witchcraft from Development

Chapter Eight: Conclusion: Tempopolitics, Or Why Development Should Not be Defined as the Improvement of Living Standards

 

Notes

References

Index

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