Mégsem tetszik a termék? Semmi gond! Nálunk 30 napon belül visszaküldheti
Ajándékutalvánnyal nem hibázhat. A megajándékozott az ajándékutalványért bármit választhat kínálatunkból.
30 nap a termék visszaküldésére
What is power? Where does it reside? This book presents a radical thesis, forged in the crucible of American history: true power does not require priesthood, temple, or initiation. In Book III: Hoodoo & Rootwork, analyst Dyrk D'Raven meticulously separates the Southern African American folk practice of Hoodoo from the diasporic religion of Vodou, a persistent and damaging confusion. This is not a book of spells or secrets. It is a book of clarity.
Journey through a profound exploration of a magic born not of mysticism, but of stark necessity. Discover how Hoodoo emerged as a pragmatic survival technology for the enslaved and oppressed, a system of "rootwork" using plants, dirt, scripture, and will to assert protection, seek justice, and maintain dignity in a world designed to deny all three. D'Raven examines its non hierarchical structure, its deep materiality, its complex use of Christian scripture as cultural adaptation, and its core ethic of personal consequence.
Hoodoo & Rootwork dismantles misconceptions, critiques modern commercialization and appropriation, and contrasts this folk power with Western ceremonial magic. It argues for precision in naming as the highest form of respect, guiding outsiders toward ethical understanding without imitation. This book is a rigorous, respectful examination of how marginalized people engineered their own spiritual authority, proving that the most potent strength is often that of the uninitiated, the resourceful, and the resilient. For readers of history, cultural studies, and the philosophy of power seeking an unflinching look at a misunderstood tradition.