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Periodical article |
| Title: | Ritual and Environment: The Mosit Ceremony of the Ethiopian Me'en People |
| Author: | Abbink, Jon G. |
| Year: | 1995 |
| Periodical: | Journal of Religion in Africa |
| Volume: | 25 |
| Issue: | 2 |
| Period: | May |
| Pages: | 163-190 |
| Language: | English |
| Geographic term: | Ethiopia |
| Subjects: | Mekan rituals environment Peoples of Africa (Ethnic Groups) Religion and Witchcraft |
| External link: | https://hdl.handle.net/1887/9088 |
| Abstract: | This essay deals with the relation between ritual behaviour and environmental conditions in an African rural society, that of the South-East Surmic (Nilo-Saharan)-speaking Me'en people, a group of 'tribal' cultivators in Käfa region, Ethiopia. The study attempts to integrate 'ideational' and material-environmental elements, in order to explain how meaning in ritual is constituted in the dialectic between human action and environmental conditions. For this purpose, a text of the 'mósit', a central ritual of the Me'en, is presented and discussed. The author looks at the significance of environmental referents in the ritual acts and words, and at how the language and the context of the 'mósit' reflect social and reproductive relations within Me'en society. The aim is an explanatory account of the 'mósit' as a religious ritual system. The unifying theoretical perspective which informs this analysis is derived from the theory of E.T. Lawson and R.N. MacCauley (1990), which advocates a 'competence'-approach to religious ritual behaviour. Bibliogr., notes, ref. |