preview

Witchcraft And Colonialism

Better Essays

In the 17th and 18th centuries, rationality through reason and logic was presented by the thoughts and writings of philosophers such as Descartes and Locke. This influenced the ways in which people in the west obtained objective truths and the western world became dominated by scientific thought. It was during this period in western history that non-secular forces and powers became less dominant and lost some authority over the actions of monarchies, governments and civilians. With rational thought altering the way people thought about religion, it is no wonder that witchcraft in England was demoted to myth and legend, or tales of folly from times where we did not know better; under this new system of thought, anything unexplainable was deemed invalid. Throughout the 19th century in the peak of British colonialism, in western culture, it was considered a Gentleman’s duty to educate and civilise those who were less fortunate. The pursuit of unilineal cultural evolution in the form of western colonialism came from the concept of psychic unity, the idea that all people must have similar mental abilities (Harkin, 2017). It is why the question around witchcraft and rationality and its trepidatious link to psychic unity and colonial ‘primitive mentality’ (Levi-Bruhl, 1926) is still so markedly debated. To understand if witchcraft is rational, we must look to understand the cultural and social systems of those who practice it. Using Evans-Pritchard’s research on the Azande to

Get Access