Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 August 2012
A Sketch of two incidents recorded in my field notes will serve to introduce the subject of this paper.
1. Nanyuki and his wife Mwango were completing their marriage by the enyangi ceremony. I was to see the second of the major sacrifices, which takes place at the husband's homestead. A day after the appointed time, Nanyuki informed me that everything was being held up. Mwango, he said, refused to go on unless he gave her a he-goat. He had tried all day in vain to get her one; none of his neighbours wanted to barter, and he could not afford money. I almost suspected a device for putting me off and preventing me from being present at the ceremony. Why should Nanyuki, who, I knew, was eager to get back to work in his swamp garden, allow his plans to be upset by Mwango's whim? However, his anxiety and exasperation seemed genuine enough; he told me that he could not think what to do, and would have to consult Kebaso, his dead father's brother.
OBSTRUCTION PRIVILÉGIÉE DES CÉRÉMONIES DE MARIAGE PARMI LES GUSII
Cet article donne quelques exemples de procédés d'obstruction qui entravent, à divers points, le cérémonial compliqué de mariage chez les Gusii. Les actes d'obstruction sont exécutés par la mariée et par d'autres femmes et enfants qui participent à la cérémonie, mais jamais par les hommes. Leur motif est la répugnance de la part de la mariée, et l'extorsion de cadeaux et de paiements du marié et de ses parents. Des actes d'obstruction sont attendus en ces occasions et se conforment à un modéle bien déterminé. L'auteur croit, cependant, que cette façon d'agir n'est pas purement conventionnelle, mais exprime un véritable conflit d'émotions et constitue, en effet, un moyen reconnu et approuvé socialement de dormer une issue anodine aux sentiments qui pourraient autrement susciter des querelles qui porteraient atteinte au mariage et aux rapports harmonieux des deux groupes de gens apparentés qui y sont concernés.
page 113 note 1 A Bantu people of Western Kenya (South Nyanza), numbering about 200,000; called ‘Kisii’ by Kenya Europeans. My fieldwork, which covered some two years, was done between 1946 and 1949.
page 113 note 2 This paper was read at a meeting of the Royal Anthropological Institute, London, on February 14th, 1950.
page 115 note 1 Cf. my paper on The Lineage Principle in Gusii Society, International African Institute Memorandum XXIV, 1949.Google Scholar
page 115 note 2 Cf. p. 121 below.
page 117 note 1 Cf. p. 115 above.
page 124 note 1 The principle that there should be no direct opposition between men is maintained even in the single case when obstruction is permitted to a man the claiming of his reward by the groomsman. Here, as we have seen, the bride acts as intermediary between him and her parents.