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by Andrew Apter (Author)
How can we account for the power of ritual? This is the guiding question of Black Critics and Kings, which examines how Yoruba forms of ritual and knowledge shape politics, history, and resistance against the state. Focusing on "deep" knowledge in Yoruba cosmology as an interpretive space for configuring difference, Andrew Apter analyzes ritual empowerment as an essentially critical practice, one that revises authoritative discourses of space, time, gender, and sovereignty to promote political--and even violent--change.
In the summer of 1990 I returned to Ayede, the Ekiti Yoruba town and kingdom where I had conducted dissertation research nearly six years earlier (1982-84) and which appears in the ethnography of this study. The more structural concerns of my dissertation had given way to the interpretive themes which emerged only in the reworking of my material; thus I confronted and earlier epistemology which had guided my research and which to some extent still informs it.
Andrew Apter is professor of history and anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles, and chair of the interdepartmental program in African studies. His book, Beyond Words: Discourse and Critical Agency in Africa, is also published by the University of Chicago Press.
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