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Critique of Anthropology
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The Body as Wound

Possession, Malandros and Everyday Violence in Venezuela

Francisco Ferrándiz

University of Deusto, Bilbao, Spain pacofm{at}orion.deusto.es

During the 1990s, Venezuela saw both an intensification in the levels of everyday violence and in the ideological operations blaming the poor for this state of affairs, resulting in a large-scale criminalization of shantytown dwellers, especially young men. This production of social stigma is of one piece with the implementation of repressive state policies. Based on one-year’s ethnographic fieldwork on the well-known spirit possession cult of MarÌa Lionza in the shantytowns of Caracas, this article discusses one relevant aspect of the extensive social trauma taking shape in the shadow of these events. As an emergent form of popular religion where different styles of embodiment are constantly being produced, the cult quickly activated spirits of a particular type dormant in its populous pantheon: the delinquents – malandros. These spirits, which became an instant success among young spiritist mediums, trace out the tragic encounter of scores of poor Venezuelans with the change of the century.

Key Words: delinquents (‘malandros’) • embodiment • memory • shantytowns • social trauma • spiritism • Venezuela • violence • youth

Critique of Anthropology, Vol. 24, No. 2, 107-133 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/0308275X04042649


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F. Ferrandiz
Open veins: Spirits of violence and grief in Venezuela
Ethnography, March 1, 2009; 10(1): 39 - 61.
[Abstract] [PDF]