Literature DB >> 35548479

Mens Daemonica: Guilt, Justice, and the Occult in South Africa.

Sonia Rupcic1.   

Abstract

In winter 2014, the town of Thohoyandou, South Africa was gripped with panic after a series of rapes and murders. In this area, notorious for its occult specialists and witchcraft, stories began to circulate attributing the violence to demonic forces. These stories were given credence by the young man who was charged with these crimes. In his testimony, he confirmed that he was possessed by evil forces. Taking this story as a point of departure, this article provides an empirical account of the ambivalent ways state sites of criminal justice grapple with the occult in South Africa. Drawing on twenty-two months of ethnographic fieldwork, I describe how spirit possession is not easily reconciled with legal methods of parsing criminal liability in courtrooms. And yet, when imprisoned people are paroled, the state entertains the possibility of bewitchment in public ceremonies of reconciliation. Abstracting from local stories about the occult, this article proposes mens daemonica ("demonic mind") to describe this state of hijacked selfhood and as an alternative to the mens rea ("criminal mind") observed in criminal law. While the latter seeks the cause of wrongdoing in the authentic will of the autonomous, self-governing subject, mens daemonica describes a putatively extra-legal idea of captured volition that implicates a vast and ultimately unknowable range of others and objects in what only appears to be a singular act of wrongdoing. This way of reckoning culpability has the potential to inspire new approaches to justice.

Entities:  

Keywords:  criminal justice; culpability; law; legal pluralism; occult; possession; reconciliation

Year:  2021        PMID: 35548479      PMCID: PMC9090196          DOI: 10.1017/s0010417521000165

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Comp Stud Soc Hist        ISSN: 0010-4175


  4 in total

1.  Ties of dependence: AIDS and transactional sex in rural Malawi.

Authors:  Ann Swidler; Susan Cotts Watkins
Journal:  Stud Fam Plann       Date:  2007-09

2.  The Development and Evaluation of a Life Skills Programme for Young Adult Offenders.

Authors:  Jacques Jordaan; Roelf Beukes; Karel Esterhuyse
Journal:  Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol       Date:  2017-10-31

3.  The concept of therapeutic 'emplotment'.

Authors:  C Mattingly
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  1994-03       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 4.  The scandal of manhood: 'Baby rape' and the politicization of sexual violence in post-apartheid South Africa.

Authors:  Deborah Posel
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2005-05
  4 in total

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