Possessed and dispossessed youth: spirit possession of school children in northwest Madagascar.
Culture, medicine and psychiatry September 1, 1990 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1007/bf00117560 via PubMed
Summary
In northwest Madagascar, young adolescent schoolgirls who have migrated alone to town for school are afflicted by possession from volatile Njarinintsy spirits. Unlike the older tromba spirits, Njarinintsy possession is a recent phenomenon. These girls face the conflicts of rural-to-urban transition and the challenges of educational policy, coping alone with the chaos of a fragmented world. Possession becomes their means to express the disorder in their daily lives.
Study at a glance
| Design | ethnography |
|---|---|
| Population | young adolescent schoolgirls in Ambanja, northwest Madagascar |
| Key finding | Njarinintsy spirit possession among young migrant schoolgirls in Ambanja is a recent phenomenon that provides a means to express the chaos of their fragmented lives. |
Abstract
Spirit possession is a common experience shared by many women in northwest Madagascar. In the town of Ambanja, possession by volatile and dangerous Njarinintsy spirits is an affliction which strikes young, adolescent schoolgirls. When Njarinintsy is contrasted with tromba, another well-known class of spirits found in this region, it becomes clear that Njarinintsy possession is a relatively recent phenomenon, and its victims form a discrete and unusual group. These girls are, in essence, young migrants, who have moved alone to town in order to attend school. Close examination of their experiences reveals that these young girls must cope, on their own, with the conflicts and contradictions that plague the shift from rural to town life, and from youth to adulthood. Such problems are further complicated by those associated with educational policy in Madagascar. These children, more than any other members of this community, suffer from the contradictions of a fragmented world. Possession provides them with a means through which to express the chaos inherent in their daily lives.