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Ideological Confrontation and the Manipulation of Oral History: a Zambesian Case1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2014

Matthew Schoffeleers*
Affiliation:
Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam

Extract

Ever since Malinowski formulated his concept of myths as charters, there has been a tendency among anthropologists to regard origin myths more or less as post factum constructs designed to legitimize existing privileges and positions. A classic example of this pragmatist view is Leach's study of political systems in highland Burma, in which he attempts to demonstrate that origin myths change with clocklike regularity in response to shifts in the political constellation. More recently, however, voices have been raised, particularly among historians, which insist that a society's past cannot always be manipulated at will, but that under certain conditions it has to be treated circumspectly in the way one deals with any scarce resource.

My own interpretation of this view is that accounts of the past, when they concern important aspects of a society, are often (or perhaps always) constructed in such a way that the original event is somehow preserved and recoverable. The qualification “somehow” is added on purpose to make clear that the phrase ‘oral history’ refers to such a wide range of genres and mnemonic techniques, and that the methods at our disposal to extract the original event are still so rudimentary--despite the progress made over the past dozen years or so--that for the moment one cannot do more than express belief in our ultimate capability to discover what happened in actual fact.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1987

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Footnotes

1.

This paper was first presented at the conference on Culture and Consciousness in Southern Africa, Manchester, 23-26 September 1986.

References

Notes

2. Malinowski, Bronislaw, “Magic, science, and religion” in Science, Religion, and Reality, ed. Needham, Joseph (London, 1925)Google Scholar

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5. Among others Willis, Roy G., On Historical Reconstruction From Oral-Traditional Sources: A Structural Approach (Edinburgh, 1976)Google Scholar; Henige, David, Oral Historiography (London, 1982)Google Scholar; Vansina, Jan, Oral Tradition as History (Madison, 1985).Google Scholar

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7. Ranger, T.O., Revolt in Southern Rhodesia, 1896-97: a Study in African Resistance (London, 1967)Google Scholar; Guardians of the Land: Essays on Central African Territorial Cults, ed. Schoffeleers, J.M. (Gwelo, 1979), 146Google Scholar

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11. Ibid.; Schoffeleers, . “The Zimba and the Lundu State in the Late Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Century,” paper presented at the African Studies Association meeting, Madison, 30 October – 2 November 1986Google Scholar

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13. Theal, G.M., ed. Records of South Africa (9 vols.: London, 1898-1903), 7: 295Google Scholar

14. Schoffeleers, “Zimba and Lundu State;” idem., “Martyr Cult”

15. Schoffeleers, , “Cult Idioms and the Dialectics of a Region” in Regional Cults, ed. Werbner, R.P. (London, 1977), 219–39Google Scholar

16. A complete annotated text of this version may be found in Schoffeleers, , “The Story of the Mbona the Martyr” in Man, Meaning, and History, ed. Schefold, R.et al (The Hague, 1980), 246–67Google Scholar

17. Mandala, E.C., “Capitalism, Ecology, and Society: The Lower Tchiri (Shire) Valley of Malawi, 1860-1960” (Ph.D., Minnesota, 1983), 4143Google Scholar

18. Schoffeleers, “Mbona the Martyr.”

19. Idem., “Introduction” in Guardians of the Land

20. E.g., Lan, David, Guns and Rain: Guerrillas and Spirit Mediums in Zimbabwe (Los Angeles, 1985)Google Scholar