The witch-hunt, or, The triumph of morality

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 14, 2024 | History

The witch-hunt, or, The triumph of morality

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In the village of Bisipara in eastern India, an anthropologist is witness to a drama when a young girl takes a fever and quickly dies. The villagers find Susila's death suspicious and fear that she was possessed. Holding an investigation to find someone to blame, they carry out a hurried inquiry because the stage must be cleared for the annual celebration of the birthday of the god Sri Ramchandro. However, they eventually agree on the identity of a culprit and exact from him a large fine.

F. G. Bailey, who was doing fieldwork in Bisipara the 1950s, tells what it was like to be living there during this witch-hunt. As his narrative unfolds, we sense the very texture of the villagers' lives - their caste relationships, occupations, kinship networks, and religious practices. We became familiar with the sights, sounds, and smells of Bisipara and with many of the village men and women.

And we learn their ideas of health and disease, their practice of medicine and burial customs, their ways of resolving discord.

The author's commentary opens the curtain on a larger and more complicated scene. It portrays a community in the process of change. From one aspect the offender is seen as a heroic individual who has broken from the chains of the past, a dissenter standing up for his rights against an entrenched and conservative establishment. From the opposite point of view he is a troublemaker who rejects the moral order on which society and the good life depend, a man who has trespassed outside his proper domain.

From Bailey's neutral perspective, the offender's conduct threatened those in power; their determined and successful effort to punish him was an attempt to protect their own privileged position. In doing so, of course, they could say they were defending the moral order of their community.

  1. Bailey moves easily between fieldnotes and memory as he takes a new look at his first impressions and reflects on what he has learned. His elegant book is a powerful reassessment of anthropology's most enduring themes and debates which will imprint on the reader's mind a vivid image of a place and its people.
Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
221

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: The witch-hunt, or, The triumph of morality
The witch-hunt, or, The triumph of morality
1994, Cornell University Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes index.

Published in
Ithaca
Other Titles
Witch-hunt., Triumph of morality.

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
306/.0954/13
Library of Congress
GN635.I4 B35 1994, GN635.I4B35 1994

The Physical Object

Pagination
ix, 221 p. :
Number of pages
221

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1079844M
ISBN 10
0801430216
LCCN
94003193
OCLC/WorldCat
747304522, 29878071
Library Thing
2333054
Goodreads
6137647

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