TY - JOUR
T1 - Violence, legitimacy, and prophecy
T2 - Nuer struggles with uncertainty in South Sudan
AU - Hutchinson, Sharon
AU - Pendle, Naomi
N1 - Funding information:
Hutchinson gratefully acknowledges the intellectual stimulation of former department colleagues at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) and funding support from a Norwegian Research Council ISP Grant, directed by Liv Haram (NTNU), on inequality and uncertainty.
The London School of Economics (LSE) financially supported Pendle’s research.
PY - 2015/7/21
Y1 - 2015/7/21
N2 - Contemporary South Sudanese Nuer prophets play powerful roles in interpreting the moral limits of lethal violence and weighing the legitimacy claims of rival government leaders. Their activities remain largely invisible to external observers investigating the making and unmaking of fragile states. Focusing on South Sudan's tumultuous 2005–14 period, we reveal these hidden dynamics through analysis of the two most-powerful living western Nuer prophets. Gatdeang Dit, a male prophet of the divinity Deng, rejects all forms of violent aggression and fosters relations of peace and intermarriage with Dinka neighbors. Nyachol, a female prophet of Maani, inspires thousands of armed Nuer youth to retaliate against Dinka cattle raiders and other external threats while insisting on purification for Nuer–Nuer homicides. Despite their differences, both prophets invoke God's superior powers to push back against the simplified, secularized, and objectified forms of violence glorified by rival government elites. [prophecy, government, violence, legitimacy, uncertainty, Nuer, South Sudan]
AB - Contemporary South Sudanese Nuer prophets play powerful roles in interpreting the moral limits of lethal violence and weighing the legitimacy claims of rival government leaders. Their activities remain largely invisible to external observers investigating the making and unmaking of fragile states. Focusing on South Sudan's tumultuous 2005–14 period, we reveal these hidden dynamics through analysis of the two most-powerful living western Nuer prophets. Gatdeang Dit, a male prophet of the divinity Deng, rejects all forms of violent aggression and fosters relations of peace and intermarriage with Dinka neighbors. Nyachol, a female prophet of Maani, inspires thousands of armed Nuer youth to retaliate against Dinka cattle raiders and other external threats while insisting on purification for Nuer–Nuer homicides. Despite their differences, both prophets invoke God's superior powers to push back against the simplified, secularized, and objectified forms of violence glorified by rival government elites. [prophecy, government, violence, legitimacy, uncertainty, Nuer, South Sudan]
UR - https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/amet.12138
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1111/amet.12138
DO - https://doi.org/10.1111/amet.12138
M3 - Article
SN - 0094-0496
VL - 42
SP - 415
EP - 430
JO - American Ethnologist
JF - American Ethnologist
IS - 3
ER -