我要吃瓜

Article

Of meat and ritual: Consumptive and religious uses of pangolins in Mali

Details

Citation

Ingram DJ, Edwards IB & Kedzierska Manzon A (2022) Of meat and ritual: Consumptive and religious uses of pangolins in Mali. African Journal of Ecology, 60 (2), pp. 184-192. https://doi.org/10.1111/aje.12945

Abstract
First paragraph: In many parts of Africa, wildlife is locally consumed for meat (Ingram et al., 2021). Hunting and consuming wild animals for meat is common in rural areas across the continent, and their bodies are openly sold in markets, along roadsides, and in restaurants or ‘chopbars’ (Eniang et al., 2008; Gonodelé Bi et al., 2017; Ingram et al., 2018). In some places, animal body parts are also used in traditional remedies purported to treat a variety of afflictions or bring good fortune (Bakarr et al., 2001; De Surgy, 1993; Imperato, 1977; Kedzierska & Jouvelet, 2006; Marshall, 1998; Sale, 1981). Wildlife is a fundamental component of ritual practices for some communities, both for consumptive ceremonial uses and as part of remedies (e.g. powders to mix with water and drink or bath with, scrubs, ointments) and/or ritual objects such as power objects or fetishes1 . Thus, it comes as no surprise that the body parts of wild animals are also sold in traditional ‘medicine’ or ‘fetish’ markets in several West African countries (Bassett, 2003; Hellweg, 2011; Nikolaus, 2011). Wildlife is still openly sold in traditional ‘medicine’ and/or fetish markets in Mali (Kedzierska & Jouvelet, 2006), C?te d'Ivoire (Bassett, 2003), Togo (D’Cruze et al., 2020), Benin (Djagoun et al., 2013), Ghana (Gbogbo & Daniels, 2019) and Nigeria (Nikolaus, 2011).

Keywords
bushmeat; Donsow; fetish; Manidae; West Africa; wild meat

Journal
African Journal of Ecology: Volume 60, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Funders and Wenner-Gren Foundation
Publication date30/06/2022
Publication date online19/02/2022
Date accepted by journal24/11/2021
URL
PublisherWiley
ISSN0141-6707
eISSN1365-2028

Files (1)