Funerals and the Public Space of Sentiment in Botswana

Funerals and the Public Space of Sentiment in Botswana

Author: 
Durham, Deborah
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Klaits, Frederick, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Journal of Southern African Studies (JSAS)
Source: 
Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 28, No. 4, pp. 777-795, December 2002
Abstract: 

In Botswana, funerals are key to the exercise of civil conduct. Funerals constitute distinctive public spaces that focus local attention on how particular persons' sentiments influence the well-being of others. By managing the social impact of sentiments of sorrow, love, jealousy, anger and resignation, all those who attend funerals ideally maintain a footing of civility, preventing recognised differences from causing permanent disruptions in social relations. In the context of death, people shape forms of community and difference - along lines of ethnicity, class, religion, gender and kinship - through the mutuality of their emotions. Funerals thus give rise to a public space and a civil discourse based on sentiment, as distinct from the bureaucratic and rationalising practices of official nationalism. This article is based on the authors' respective fieldwork in a Herero minority community in Mahalapye, and with an Apostolic church in Gaborone.

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Durham, Deborah. Funerals and the Public Space of Sentiment in Botswana . : Taylor & Francis , . Journal of Southern African Studies, Vol. 28, No. 4, pp. 777-795, December 2002 - Available at: https://library.au.int/funerals-and-public-space-sentiment-botswana-3