ABSTRACT

First Published in 2004. Uncertainty is an aspect of existence among the Maasai in East Africa. They take ritual precautions against mystical misfortune, especially at their ceremonial gatherings, which exude displays of confidence, and generate a sense of time, space, community, and being. Yet their performances are undermined by a concern for clandestine psychopaths who are thought to create havoc through sorcery. Normally elders seek moral explanations for erratic encounters with misfortune, viewing God as the Supreme and unknowable figure of Providence. However, sorcery lies beyond their collective wisdom, and they look for guidance from their Prophet, as a more powerful sorcerer to whom they are bound for protection. This work examines the variation of this pattern, associated with different profiles of social life and tension across the Maasai federation.

chapter 1|12 pages

INTRODUCTION

part |2 pages

Part I THE BOUNDARIES OF TIME, SPACE, AND CERTAINTY

part |2 pages

Part II DIVERGING MODELS IN SPACE AND VARIATION OVER TIME

chapter 7|33 pages

THE PURKO MAASAI IN 1977

A northern model

chapter 8|25 pages

THE KISONKO MAASAI OF LOITOKITOK IN 1977

A southern model

chapter 9|29 pages

A PRE-COLONIAL MODEL AND THE HUB OF POWER

chapter 11|24 pages

CONCLUSION

The interplay of power and providence, and the theory of dilemmas