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THE LITERALIST FALLACY AND THE PROBLEM OF ORAL TRADITIONAuthor(s): Roy WillisSource: Social Analysis: The International Journal of Social and Cultural Practice, No. 4, UsingOral Sources: Vansina and Beyond (SEPTEMBER 1980), pp. 28-37Published by: Berghahn BooksStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/23160309 .
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SOCIAL ANALYSIS No. 4, September 980
THE LITERALIST FALLACY AND THE PROBLEM OF ORAL TRADITION
Roy Willis
I. Theory
For a long time the question of the possible historicity of oral-traditional narrative has been largely a matter of opinion. However there have recently been
signs that the grounds of the dogmatic debate may be shifting from those of mere assertion and counter-assertion to a more fruitful area which could admit scientific criteria of testability and falsifiability.
Extreme positions have been typical during the debate's lengthy pre-scientific
phase, marking limits of pendulum-like swings of scholarly sentiment between fideistic attitudes towards oral-traditional texts and outright scepticism. As the British folklorist Sidney Hartland, himself a sceptic in this sense, noted in 1914:
Half a century ago or less the worthlessness of oral tradition as historical
evidence was accepted as an axiom that needed no demonstration. A long line of sceptical critics, including among them the illustrious name of Sir Isaac Newton, had dissolved the credulity of educated men... of late years,
however, in this as in many other matters there has been a reaction. With
hardly any formal challenge of critical principles the attitude at least of ethnological inquirers has been somewhat changed. In many directions there has been a tendency to accept traditions not merely as giving a
general indication of the direction in which the solution of problems may be sought, but as accurate in detail (Hartland 1914:428).
Hartland's position was shortly afterwards endorsed by a renowned father of
American anthropology, Robert H. Lowie, with the uncompromising statement
that "I cannot attach to oral traditions any historical value whatsoever under any conditions whatsoever" (Lowie 1915:598). Two years later he reiterated his
sceptical opinion, while adding a qualification that made his position similar to that of some latter-day structuralists:
. . . in denying to oral traditions of primitive tribes their face value, we are
not denying to them all value whatsoever. On the contrary, it is clear that
even the wildest and manifestly impossible tales may be of the utmost
importance as revelations of the cultural status of the people who cherish
them (Lowie 1917:161). A more moderate view was put forward about the same time by Lowie's
illustrious colleague and compatriot, A. A. Goldenweiser, who thought that "some
traditions are wholly untrue, others are partly true, while still others may be wholly true". Conceding that oral traditions were "poor evidence", in opposition to Lowie
Goldenweiser nevertheless considered that
the extent to which such evidence can be trusted is determined by the
probability of its being true evidence, which again may be estimated from
the frequency of agreement between such evidence and evidence of an
intrinsically higher merit (Goldenweiser 1915:763) . The Goldenweiser-Lowie dispute soon faded from scholarly attention with the
virtual triumph in the 1920's of Malinowskian functionalism, with its doctrine that oral traditions purporting to explain the past were to be understood primarily as
"charters" for present social orders (cf. Malinowski 1954:166). But later
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anthropologists ot the lunctionalist school rediscovered historical significance in
oral-traditional narratives. This falling away from the pure gospel of functionalist
synchronism occurred in the implicit fashion that Hartland had earlier discerned,
without any "formal challenge of critical principles". Ironically, this theoretical backsliding seems to have been particularly marked among anthropologists trained
in Britain, the citadel of functionalism. As the American anthropologist G.P. Murdock complained in 1959,
britisft social anthropologists, as in the volumes ot the Ethnographic
Survey of Africa, invariably give serious consideration to native historical traditions, the one type of historical information that is virtually valueless
(Murdock 1959:43). A leading exponent ot this unavowed heresy was E.E. Evans-Pritchard, a
student of both Malinowski and of Radcliffe-Brown,the latter of whom had laid it down that "in the primitive societies studied by social anthropology there are no
historical records" (Radcliffe-Brown 1952:3). Writing of the historical traditions of the Zande people of the southern Sudan in Africa, Evans-Pritchard observed that
For the earliest periods of Zande history we have to rely on native
traditions . . . What historical value is to be credited to the native
traditions? .. . where the literary records are not silent they confirm Zande
statements. Since this is so, we may lend greater credence to traditions
about earlier periods of their history . . . (Evans-Pritchard 1958:3). Airica, tne locus ol tvans-Pritchard's now classical researches, is probably the
continent most richly endowed with orally-transmitted historical narratives. And it
was appropriate that it was a scholar working in this continent, the Belgian historian and ethnographer Jan Vansina, who in 1961 produced the first treatise
purporting to deal with both the theoretical and practical problems of collecting historical information in non-literate societies. Although De la tradition orale clearly aimed at general and universal significance, the material discussed was
nearly all drawn from three African societies of the 'state-like' category — the Kuba
of Zaire, Ruanda and Burundi. One critical review indeed complained that "cet ouvrage n'est pas une mise en perspective des problemes de l'histoire tels qu'ils se
posent a propos des peuples sans ecriture, mais plutot un manuel" (Deluz-Chiva
1962:130). It is true that most of Tradition consists of a detailed typology of oral traditional forms, but it also possesses a considerable, if largely implicit, theoretical content. This can perhaps best be described as 'literalist' and stands in radical
opposition to some of the key tenets of social anthropology. Possibly because of the
density of Vansina's descriptive material and his low-keyed, unpolemical literary style, this fact seems to have eluded the notice of anthropologists for some while. One who did eventually take notice was T. O. Beidelman, and in 1970 he delivered a strong counter-attack on behalf of social anthropology:
. . . interpretation ol traditional oral material is exceedingly difficult and
requires that historians bent on such analysis first master the rudiments of social anthropology . . . Vansina makes no sophisticated attempt to show how he could determine when the items of oral tradition are simply reflections of these social and cosmological values (Beidelman 1970:74,95).
Beidelman may have argued his case a little too strongly (a number of gross mis-statements are itemised in Pender-Cudlip 1972), but the substance of it was valid: Vansina possessed no theoretical method of sorting symbolic from factual material in his oral-traditional narratives. Another American anthropologist, Wyatt MacGaffey, argued in milder tones but in essentially the same vein in 1974:
The modern willingness to employ indigenous texts and concepts for historiographic purposes is not enough unless the cosmologies that generate them can first be understood. Real history .. . cannot be inferred
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from tradition in any simple way. To accept as historical even such
portions of tradition as look real to the foreign eye is to submit unawares to
the authority of indigenous cosmology as much as though one had also
accepted the magical portions as historically real (MacGaffey 1974:417,421).
Vansina responded to his anthropological critics by modifying the key concept in De la tradition orale, the notion of an "archetypal" testimony which the oral historian could recover by reconstructing its "chain of transmission" (Vansina 1961:137 et passim). In an article in the journal (Daedalus in 1971 he noted:
It is not always possible to reconstruct the original tradition from variants.
When the wording is frozen, textual analysis can lead to the construction
of an archetype. If the tradition has a rigid form but the wording is free, as in the case of an epic, only part of an archetype can be reconstructed because the wording does not belong completely to the tradition. In the
case of a narrative, there is no archetype at all (Vansina 1971:448). This modification badly damaged the logical coherence of Vansina's argument
in Tradition, the implicit parallel with what J.C. Miller was later to call "the
documentary analogy" (Miller 1978:75). But Vansina showed no awareness of this fact beyond observing that "the historian must be an anthropologist", while
reasserting that "oral traditions have been used intensively and are being used more
and more in reconstructing Africa's history" (1971:448). In a further contribution to the discussion in 1974 Vansina appeared to
concede the substance of the anthropologists' case in saying that "every statement,
written or not, is structured and carries the imprint of the unconscious and
conscious Weltanschauung of its author" (Vansina 1974:320). But he added, defiantly,
And yet historians have been able to use them (oral-traditional narratives) ... To deny all validity to such traditions, in principle because they are an
sxpression of cognitive systems is as naive as to assume in principle that
they are only mythical charters in the functional sense and should not be sources for the historian (Vansina 1974:320,322).
Vansina was in effect arguing for both sides of the long-continuing debate between fideists and sceptics about the historical value of oral-traditional narratives. What is of course missing from Vansina's modified theoretical stance is any indication of how mythical or symbolic meaning is to be distinguished from historical fact in narrative data. Moreover, these theoretical self-criticisms in the wake of scholarly reaction to Tradition are only one side of Vansina's still developing work, the product of his left hand, as it were. With hes right hand Vansina continues to produce relentlessly literalist accounts of African
sthnography. Kingdoms of the Savanna (1966) made a central historical figure out of the name Kongolo (or Nkongolo), a name which Luc de Heusch (the cosmically drunken king of Africanist structuralism) has shown to represent the natural
phenomenon of the rainbow which is itself an element in a widely shared system of
:osmological symbols among the savanna states of central Africa.1 Kinguri, mother important historical figure in Vansina's account, has been shown by J.C.
Miller to be the title of a political office inherited under the common central African
system of perpetual or positional succession.2 Since 1961 Vansina has also
published historical studies of the Rwanda, Rundi and Kuba states. In Tradition these were announced as "complementary" to the 1961 text and therefore require
special consideration as exemplifications of Vansina's theoretical stance.
L' evolution du royaume Rwanda des origines a 1900 1962) is the least interesting of these "complementary" tests. Ruanda oral traditions present a dual picture of
progressive outward expansion of state power from a central territory, combined
with increasing complexification of administrative structures. In this case, as in the
parallel case of the Ganda state, there is every reason to believe that what the
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traditions purport to say corresponds broadly with the tacts. Vansinas essay endorses this view. He also proposes a chronology which plausibly corrects Kagame's over-exuberant interpretation of the indigenous sources (Vansina
1962:95). 1 he neighbouring and ethnically related society ot the Kundi present a very
different and evidently intractable problem for Vansina's methodology. La legende du passe: traditions orales du Burundindi (1972) gives us a picture of a society which, in complete contrast to history-conscious Ruanda, appears to deny
history altogether. For the Rundi, configurations of social conditions succeed one
another in a predestined and cyclical order. There is not concept of historical
causality and therefore no 'history' in the conventional sense:
si 1 histoire est predestinee et cyclique, eile est aussi statique. Le temps en
fait est aboli. Le passe, c'est une serie d'images d'Epinal, de tableaux non
relies les uns aux autres. C'est une juxtaposition, non un deroulement. Les
:hoses surviennent sans causes et passent sans effets (Vansina 1972:10). vansina s encounter with tfie Kundi traditions is highly instructive. Here is a
complex state system and a wealth of narratives about the past. Yet Vansina admits
that, in face of the ahistorical ideology of the Rundi, he is unable to extract any iiistorical information from the indigenous material:
Les sources oraies pour l'tiistoire du Burundi sont un scandale, du moins,
pour rhistorien. Elles ne sont pas serieuses du tout et elles sont
ndispensables. C'est un veritable defi (Vansina 1972:219). ine L.nuaren oj woot: A History oj the Kuba Peoples (1978) is the third3 and
by far the most substantial of the three "complementary" volumes to the Tradition. It is a mine of ethnographic reportage. Seemingly, it offers a grand view of Kuba history of a scope and magnitude rarely encountered in Africanist historiography. Yet Woot also exhibits vast defects. Although Vansina begins by telling us that "my own perceptions about history have altered" and "all narrative material is structured by the mind so it can be remembered and that memory either streamlines Dr tends to symbolize" (1978:10,27), there is almost no attempt to identify, let alone interpret, symbolic material. Vansina has leaned to handle origin myths rather more circumspectly, although even here he shows reluctance to abandon literalism
mtirely: . . pernaps tne Kuoa actually came trom downstream. That would explain
vhy they stress this in their cosmology, their perception and organization )f space, and the like (1978:45).
Dui in principle ne is inclined to deny historical significance to patently mythical' narrative:
in presenting Kuba genesis, only the raw material has been given in order :o show what the historian can use and why most of the data are
mtological speculation divorced from real events and processes in a real )ast. An adequate analysis of these data would require a separate nonograph (1978:227-228).
ironicauy, it is ratner what the historian can not use that is indicated by Vansina's 'altered perceptions' about history. What he has learned from
inthropological criticism of Tradition is to fence off patently 'mythical' data as autside the scope of the historian. Notwithstanding Vansina's post-Tradition icceptance of the pervasive influence of Wellanschauungen in purportedly listorical material,' Woot is innocent of even the most rudimentary attempt at tructural analysis, the only theoretical tool capable of extracting objective ignificance from the veiled language of cosmological symbolism.
moreover, wnen it comes to dealing with apparently non-empirical items in he corpus of Kuba traditions dealing with their history since the mythical origins, /'ansina shows himself no further advanced than the primitive literalism of rradition.
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Kot aNce was also a great magician who cut a river in two with his sword
(the Red Sea motif), cut off his own head to delouse it, and silenced the weaver birds who were twittering away during a council meeting. More personable is the tale that he invented a tall, pointed hat because he was
short and wanted to be more impressive ... his successor improved the
design of the razor blade. These tales seem to have little if any bearing on the concept of kingship (1978:228-229).
Possibly not. Yet a structuralist would hardly fail to notice that the story of
Kot aNce's cutting off his own head (which Vansina presumably discounts as non historical) is the complementary opposite ("negation of head") of the "personable" (i.e. historical?) tall hat story ("exaggeration of head"). Obviously, a deeper analysis of this set of stories would require consideration of the symbolic resonances of the
concept "head" in Kuba symbology. Unfortunately, and to the best of my
knowledge, we lack information on this particular topic. Is there a way out ot the literalist impasse, a way 01 avoiding Vansina s Fallacy
which can also provide a method of extracting historical information from orally transmitted texts?
A positive answer to this pressing question emerges from the work of Joseph C. Miller, an Africanist historian who is a former student of Vansina. The basic misconception underlying Tradition is identified by Miller as "the documentary inalogy" — thought, with a delicate filial piety which must compel respect, Miller refrains from making this connection explicit:
1 he basic assumption invalidated by acknowledged changes in how oral
historians describe past events might be termed the "documentary analogy". Literate historians, reasoning by analogy with established methods of inferring history from written sources, have concentrated on a
single dimension of oral historical performances: their words. They have faithfully transcribed these words and treated them as direct witness to the
past very much as they would analyze any other historical document
surviving unchanged from remote times into the historian's present... all of these implications of the documentary analogy were captured in the
prevalent designation of the oral sourc as a "tradition"... At the very least, a transmuted version of it could be restored to an original form through analysis of the "chain of transmission". The documentary analogy was
clear, and it implied that no significant change had taken place in the way events were described between some imputed original eyewitness account and the last performance in the chain of transmissions (Miller, in Bernardi, Poni, and Triulzi (eds.), 1978:75-76).
It is clear, however, that radical changes in the way events are described do occur in the process of transmission. Miller and his colleagues4 contend that these changes can be formally described and analysed so as to produce historical data. The techniques required to perform these'operations are those developed within the schools of cognitive and structuralist anthropology (Miller 1978:98). This is a road which some historically-minded anthropologists have also followed. A notable recent example is Feierman's combined structural and historical analysis of the
sovereignty myth of the Shambaa people of Tanzania (Feierman 1974). Here we
see, as Miller also notes, a most promising convergence between the disciplines of
history and anthropology. For this group of scholars the key insight has been that
'mythical' and 'magical' motifs in oral-traditional history can be 'decoded' and
understood as indigenous representations or models of sociological processes (cf. Miller 1978; Willis 1976). We can now see the possibility, through this conjunction of historical scholarhsip and formal analysis, of an objective science of oral narrative. It is a prospect foreshadowed as long ago as 1916 by the American
anthropologist and linguist Edward Sapir:
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. . . one of the characteristic traits of history is its emphasis on the
individual and personal. While the importance of individual events and
personalities for the progress of human affairs is not to be underestimated,
the historical reconstructions of the cultural anthropologist can only deal, with comparatively few exceptions, with generalized events and
individualities (Mandelbaum, ed., 1949:393).
II Practice
In 1962-64, 1966 and 1977 I collected field data on the Fipa of south-west
Tanzania.5 The Fipa resemble the Kuba, Ruanda and Rundi studied by Vansina insofar as they had a state-like pre-colonial society and belong to the great Bntu
insofar as they had a state-like pre-colonial society and belong to the great Bantu
sub-family of the Niger-Congo linguistic division. Also like Vansina's three societies, the Fipa possess a wealth of oral
transmitted narratives purporting to bear on their past. Analysis and interpretation of these narratives has indeed proved, in Beidelman's words, "exceedingly difficult" (elaboration of the summary that follows can be found in Willis n.d.) But eventually a clear and internally consistent picture has appeared of an African society which underwent radical changes and emerged in late pre-colonial times with a complex and, in certain respects, unusual form of social organisation.
I he narratives, taken as a whole, describe both the historical evolution of Fipa
society and the essential features of late pre-colonial social organisation, including
highly specific (that is, deductively improbable) institutions. These structures and processes are not, however, described in literal terms. The historical message is
smbedded in a symbolic code comprised of elements from Fipa cosmology or
Weltanschauung.
However, there is no single code operative through the whole corpus of
purportedly historical narratives. Fipa indigenous history consists of three distinct sets or 'strata' of narratives, each of which requires different analytical and
interpretative procedures. The primary set comprises the myths describing the
constitution of Fipa society. The most important and structurally most complex jof these symbolic narratives I have called the 'key myth', since its 'decoding' has unlocked the door to the hitherto obscure pre-colonial past of the Fipa. Through
application of analytic techniques derived from the semiological school founded by de Sanssure, this Fipa myth is revealed as a combination of a blueprint for the late
application of analytic techniques derived from the semiological school founded by de Saussure, this Fipa myth is revealed as a combination of a blueprint for the late
pre-colonial social order and a description of a profound social revolution by which
this complex order was constructed from the components of an earlier and simpler form of society.
lhe most common version of the myth tells how three women came into Fipa
:ountry and succeeded in taking symbolic possession of the kingdom during the
king's temporary absence from the royal village. Subsequently, there was a
redistribution of sovereign powers between the priest-king and the leader of the
strange women, in a compact which was seen to be to their mutual advantage. The myth evokes the basic values of the Fipa world, values which are
represented as paired opposites, each hierarchically related to its complement: male
is thus superior to and opposed to female; centrality to externality; authority to
sower, or force; village to wilderness; and so on. Every statement in the myth is
■eplete with such 'cosmological' references. Thus the opening sentence asserts:
I here were three women who came from afar in search or a place to stay... The significant references here are contained in the number "three" (symbolising
many as opposed to few), the noun "women" {female opposed to male), the verb
'came" (opposing incoming strangers to established settlers), and the phrase "place
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to stay (another reference to the settler/stranger opposition, a crucial dualism in
Fipa cosmology). The leader of the strange women takes the royal stool of office from the king's
wife and sits on it with the words, "This is my country". Next day the king goes with the women to the summit of the sacred mountain Itweelele (opposition of height, associated with seniority, maleness, centrality and authority, against lowness, associated with juniority, femaleness, externality and force).
Then, the king, having grown hair (= animality, inferiority) under his arms,
upon reaching the summit was ashamed to reveal this hair. So he shortened
his arm, saying "My country ends with the mountain!" Then the leader of
the women stood forth erect saying "My country extends to the far
distance!" This cosmological aspect ol the myth is itself complemented by a dynamic or
'action' aspect inherent in the structure of the narrative, the myth story. Orthodox
Levi-Straussian analysis typically ignores this aspect, or collapses it into the cosmological aspect, as in my initial analysis of the Fipa myth (Willis 1967). What happens is that the myth begins with a particular and relatively simple complex of symbolic values and, through a series of actions and interactions between the
principal dramatis personae of the myth, ends with a different and more complex
arrangement of these values. Authority is divided between central and external
domains, control of sexuality being assigned to the latter. The principle of
hierarchy is reaffirmed, and associated with a continuing exchange between parties af unequal status.
ihe argument is then developed that the myth story reflects a historical
revolution in Fipa society by which a relatively simple social order based on the authority of a central king or chief ruling through dependant and inferior branches of his line was superseded by a more complex system which, while retaining the nominal overlordship of the aboriginal kingship, vested all real power in a juridically subordinate category of rulers. The political and social system associated with this latter category was one which maximised economic exchange and trade, both internal and external. Evidence from archaeology (such as it is), ethnography, documentation from the pre-colonial and early colonial periods, and first-hand field data are adduced in support of this argument.
lne ripa myths, including the central text, have thus both cosmological and historical significance.
I tie second or intermediate set or stratum of narratives consists, like the first
stratum, of symbolic statements, but the symbolism is of a different and lower order. Instead of grand, global statements constructed of Fipa cosmological symbols, the symbolic motifs of the second set of narratives refer to particularities, A few examples must suffice to illustrate the characteristic form of the narrative material from this middle period of Fipa indigenous history:
Source A
When Nandi the Younger saw the might of Nandi the Elder's army he decided it was vain to fight with him. Accordingly, he mustered all the Twa (people of the royal line supposedly descended from the strange women of the key myth) in the royal palace, set fire to it and all inside were burned to death, including Nandi the Younger himself. Thereupon Nandi the Elder became king over the country.
Source B
When Nandi saw that he was being beaten he took a whole lot of the young men and women and put them in a house to which he set fire, killing them
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all . .. When Nandi came down he found the waters of Lake Rukwa in his
way ... he took his staff and struck the waters, which parted and allowed
him to cross with his army.
Source C
On his way back he (a Twa royal called Ndaasi) found that Lake Rukwa had risen and flooded a large stretch of country to the north, thus blocking his path ... he struck upon the waters which immediately parted . . . Seeing that the fight was going against him he (Msili, a Twa royal) called for a short truce before a surrender. The attack was stayed and Msili took advantage of this to collect his family within his house whereupon he set fire to it, burning himself and them to death.
A small number (five) of the particularistic motifs exemplified in the foregoing excerpts are symbolic of repetitive social processes which were operative through a whole historical epoch — the period of transformation from a lineage-based to a complex 'state' organisation. In other words, the symbolic motifs, which may include 'magical' elements, describe the means by which the global changes referred to in the key myth were realised.
Vansina does indeed identify such motifs, for example, the "Red Sea motif" evoked in the third quotation from The Children of fVoot, but only to excluded them from historical treatment. For Miller, however, these "cliches" (as he calls them)
. . . resemble what western social scientist call'models'. Cliches, like models, are abstractions indicating the general significance of 4 class of events which are not themselves individually described (Miller 1978:87).
In the Fipa case the "models" represented by the symbolic images of the intermediate set of narratives evoke the processes of segmentary fission and fusion, immigration and regional trade. These processes, continually operative through the long historical epoch covered by the narratives, resulted eventually in the formation of a centralised, hierarchic 'state' organisation on a new economic base.
The third set or stratum of narratives coincides with the period of indigenous 'state' history in Ufipa. The narratives of this epoch, which lead up to the present, are different in kind from those of the two earlier strata, being neither cosmological nor dominated by symbolic images of social process. Instead they correspond to singular events and individual historical actors.That is, the narratives of this third historical epoch, which begins in the later eighteenth century, are similar in kind to those of literate, documentary history. Their analysis and interpretations calls for similar critical and evaluative techniques to those employed by orthodox historians.
Again a few examples must suffice to illustrate the characteristic style of these 'modern' narratives.
Ex. 1
The king of Nkansi attacked Sangu at his capital of Uli... Sangu fled ... The Akansi (people of the Twa kingdom of Nkansi, in northern Ufipa)... discovered Sangu and killed him . . . Nguwa Wapiingila succeeded to the kingship of Lyangalile (the Twa kingdom of southern Ufipa).
Ex. 2
... after Kinga Kilengwi had died at Cikumsimya the village was attacked by Nguwa . . . The next king of Nkansi was Ntinda Kwasinganwa who
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made his headquarters at Kisella. He was succeeded by Sumba Kalonga, who made his headquarters at Msanzi and then at Kaengesa. During his
reign the Ngoni invaded Ufipa.
tx. J
... the king or Nkansi, who was called Nchingaand had his headquarters at
Sungangala, attacked the king of Lyangalile who was called Sumba and
whose royal village was Ilembo . . . Nchinga was succeeded as king of
Nkansi by Msile, his brother, and Msile was succeeded by Ntinda
Kwansinganwa. During his reign the Ngoni invaded Ufipa.
I he development ot the new indigenous social order during the nineteenth
century saw the emergence of a 'big man' system of local-level kinship organisation similar to those described for Melanesia; and of a bifurcated 'state' organisation in which coercive fiscal administration was carried on by an all-female staff. Both these ethnographically peculiar institutions, and their relation to the social order as a whole, are prescribed in the key myth of Fipa society, a myth which also describes, in terms of relations between cosmological symbols, the radical social transformation through which these institutions came into being.
1 ne Mpa case shows that it is possible, indeed necessary, to include 'mythical' and 'symbolic' narrative materials in the operations of analysis and interpretation of oral traditional history; and that the techniques required call for the combined skills of anthropology and conventional history. Literalism, in the Vansina mode, simply will not do.
NOTES
1. Cf. these comments on Le roi ivre by C.C. Wrigley: "It would not be easy to guess from Vansina's matter-of-fact narrative that Nkongolo is in fact the Rainbow. This, it must be made clear, is not a speculative etymology. It is the dictionary meaning of the word, and the identification is made by the Luba themselves, who speak of the deity of this name sometimes as the spirit of an ancient king but more often as a cosmic serpent, a terrible and undying power" (Wrigley 1974:131). 2. ". . . apparent figures such as Kinguri represent permanent named political positions rather than individuals. The Imbangala, like the Lunda, practice positional succession and perpetual kinship with the result that all genealogies, for example, describe networks or perpetual titles related to each other by fictional ties rather than biological families. The "kings" mentioned in the traditions thus represent dynasties in a named office" (Miller 1972:551). 3. In between the Rundi and Kuba studies there appeared The Tio Kingdom of the Middle Congo 1880-1892 (O.U.P. 1973). Being largely a reconstruction of this African kingdom in the late nineteenth century, based on a combination of documentary and oral-traditional sources, this work falls outside the scope of the present essay. For contrastingly adverse and favourable opinions of it, see Vidal (1976) and Chretien (1977). 4. llieir work is brought together in a forthcoming collection of essays edited and introduced by Joseph C. Miller and entitled The African Past Speaks. 5. Research was funded at various times by generous grants from the Emslie Horniman Anthropological Scholarship Fund, the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research and the Centre of African Studies of the University of Edinburgh. I express my gratitude to all these bodies for their moral support and material assistance. 6. The Fipa data briefly summarised here is set out in A Stale in the Making: Myth. History and Social Transformation in Pre-Colonial Ufipa (in press).
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