Descola’s Model Of Religion and Nature Examined “Ontologies” in the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe

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Kupakwashe Mtata

Abstract

Philippe Descola suggested a scheme to enumerate dispositions to nature in such a way as to take into account non-Western practices that tend to be overshadowed by the dominance of naturalism. He also deployed this scheme to account for other religious types in the world, which in the same manner tend to be obscured by Western Christianity. This article examines Descola’s ontological scheme in the light of the case of the Mwali cult in the Matobo Hills World Heritage Site in Zimbabwe. Data gathered through a protracted period of participant observation and interviews in Matobo Hills shows that instead of the fourfold scheme Descola proposes, his reference to incarnation and figuration is a more promising avenue in an attempt to account for religious forms and the various ways humans relate to their environments.

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How to Cite
Mtata, K. (2018). Descola’s Model Of Religion and Nature Examined: “Ontologies” in the Matobo Hills of Zimbabwe. Modern Africa: Politics, History and Society, 5(2), 77–104. https://doi.org/10.26806/modafr.v5i2.197
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Author Biography

Kupakwashe Mtata, University of Bayreuth

He holds M.A. and completed his doctoral examinations in the Study of Religion at the University of Bayreuth. He is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Bayreuth Academy of Advanced African Studies. His research focuses on religion and nature by exploring ongoing encounters between Western colonial and African autochthonous ontological designs of human-environment relations in contemporary Africa. His current research is situated in and around Matobo National Park of Zimbabwe. E-mail: kmdlodlo@yahoo.com.