ABSTRACT

While there have been a number of descriptions and interpretations of boys' initiation rituals, Audrey Richards's classic study of initiation rites among the Bemba remains one of the few studies to deal in detail with the initiation of girls into adult life.
Dr Richards observed the entire chisungu or female initiation rite, an almost continuous series of complex ceremonies lasting for a month. Her detailed description of the elements of the ritual, and her analysis of it in terms of the culture of matrilineal society, have made this a classic ethnographic and theoretical text. Celebrating the attainment of sexual and social maturity, the puberty rituals reflect tribal attitudes to sex, fertility, marriage, and the rearing of children. We see how women's ceremonies portray and try to enforce the social obligations of marriage and the setting up of the kinship group, and the conflicts of interest that are involved.

chapter |3 pages

ENVIRONMENT AND ACTIVITIES

chapter |8 pages

IDEOLOGY AND DOGMA

chapter |7 pages

SOCIAL STRUCTURE

chapter |11 pages

THE MARRIAGE CONTRACT

chapter |4 pages

THE RITUAL TYPE

chapter |3 pages

THE ACTORS IN THE CEREMONY

part |1 pages

The Character of the Rite

chapter |56 pages

THE CEREMONY

part |2 pages

CALENDAR OF EVENTS AT CHISUNGU PERFORMED AT CHINSALI, NORTH-EASTERN RHODESIA, IN 1931

chapter |10 pages

III. THE INTERPRETATION OF THE CEREMONY

chapter |15 pages

EXPRESSED PURPOSES OF THE CHISUNGU

chapter |5 pages

DEDUCED ATTITUDES

chapter |10 pages

UNCONSCIOUS TENSIONS AND CONFLICTS

chapter |9 pages

PRAGMATIC EFFECTS

chapter |4 pages

Regional Bibliography