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Seeing, Healing, Reasoning: The Mandari Way of Thought

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

Extract

Knowledge that the author of a book between one’s hands died before its publication inevitably affects one’s judgement of it. At first reading, the late Dr Jean Buxton’s Religion and Healing in Mandari seemed to me to lack complete integration as a book, to be rather a collection of extremely interesting and thoughtful chapters loosely strung together. Further reading, however, has suggested to me that this impression is a superficial reaction to a remarkable quality in the book, its capacity to give attention to several different themes in succession, or rather, to give each theme its own value in the overall pattern of Mandari thinking and doing, without either isolating it from the whole, or giving the totality an imposed, schematic unity in the service of some favourite formula. Dr Buxton refused to see Mandari reality as a collection of bits and pieces or as a shapeless mass or as a geometrical pattern.

The Mandari are a people of the southern Sudan, numbering, when in the nineteen-fifties Dr Buxton did her fieldwork among them, some 15,000. They are linguistically and culturally different from the Dinka and Nuer, even though in the present century they have undergone considerable influence from the latter. Dr Buxton had already described their social institutions in her earlier Chiefs and Strangers; her theme here is in fact wider than the title suggests, since, in so far as a central theme gradually emerges from the rich and fascinating material here presented, it is how the Mandari order and arrange in a rational way what they see and experience. Nothing is in the mind which is not first in the senses, said the old scholastics; or, as an excited disciple of Chomsky exclaimed: ‘The human mind exists’. Dr Buxton would have accepted both these statements; but it is her merit that she has shown how they apply to an obscure, poor and non-literate people in the circumstances of the culture they have formed and the environment which dominates them.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1974 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

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References

1 pp. xiv, 443, illustrations, maps, Clarendon Press; Oxford University Press. £6 in U.K.

2 Published Oxford, 1963.

3 See Evans‐Pritchard, E. E., Nuer Religion, Oxford 1956Google Scholar. The most striking single difference between Nuer and Mandari religion seems to be this lack of sacrifice as atonement for sin against God in Mandari practice, perhaps due ultimately to a differing evaluation of unite and division in the two systems. Nuer sacrifice restores unite; Mandari sacrifice recognises division.

4 This is Evans‐Pritchard's term for similar spirits among the Nuer.

5 Religion and Healing in Mandari p. 24.

6 p. 25.

7 See particularly Meyer Fortes’ essay on this subject in M. Fortes and G. Dieterlen (ed.) African Systems of Thought, O.U.P. for International African Institute, 1965.

8 Religion and Healing in Mandari, p. 359.

9 Professor Robin Horton has advanced a very similar argument with respect to the cosmology of the Kalabari people of the Rivers State, Nigeria.

10 Religion and Healing, p. 360.

11 E. E. Evans‐Pritchard, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1937.

12 Ruth Finnegan, Oral Literature in Africa, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1970; Max Gluckman, The Ideas in Barotse Jurisprudence, Manchester University Pres; Jack Goody (editor, with Ian Watt), Literacy in Traditional Societies, Cambridge University Press; and (editor and translator), The Myth of the Bagre.

13 Turner, V. W., The Forest of Symbols, Cornell University PressGoogle Scholar.