Powers of Good and Evil: Moralities, Commodities, and Popular Belief

Front Cover
Paul Clough, Jon P. Mitchell
Berghahn Books, 2001 - Philosophy - 256 pages


A key theme in the anthropology of beliefs is the relationship between socio-economic change and changes in the belief system. It has been widely argued that rapid economic change, particularly the introduction of capitalism, leads to an increase in beliefs in, and representations of, evil and the devil. These beliefs, it is argued, constitute forms of resistance to, or rejection of, "modernity." This volume builds on these arguments, suggesting that rather than an indigenous resistance to capitalism, such representations signal a profound moral ambivalence towards the socio-economic process inherent in capitalist economy. Using a range of examples, from Surinamese zombies to American horror films, it demonstrates the extent to which evil imagery is linked to a fear of excess, particularly in situations where people find themselves, or perceive themselves, to be peripheral to the centers of political, economic, and cultural power.

 

Contents

Dangerous Creatures and the Enchantment of Modern Life
17
Regional Variations
43
The Devil Satanism and the Evil Eye in Contemporary
77
You Devil Go Away From Me Pentecostalist African
104
Modernity Crisis and the Rise of Charismatic Catholicism
135
Mormon Morality in
161
The State and the Empire of Evil
185
The Iconography of Evil in Maltese Art
210
The Political Economy behind the Powers
233
Index
253
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About the author (2001)

Paul Clough (1949-2019) was Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Malta. Jon P. Mitchell is Lecturer in Cultural and Community Studies at the University of Sussex.