Pentecostalism and Witchcraft 2017
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-56068-7_3
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Becoming Witches: Sight, Sin, and Social Change in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…People say that witches are motivated by envy and will kill those who have become successful, whether in business or in other ways, much as has been reported for some other parts of PNG where witchcraft is common (see Hughes 1988: 61‐2; Zocca 2009 a : 28; see also Eves & Forsyth 2015; Strong 2017: 84). It should be noted, however, that witches are believed not to attack at random, but target those they are close to and who are members of their ‘hauslain’ or immediate community (see also Strong 2017: 81).…”
Section: The Papua New Guinea Contextmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…People say that witches are motivated by envy and will kill those who have become successful, whether in business or in other ways, much as has been reported for some other parts of PNG where witchcraft is common (see Hughes 1988: 61‐2; Zocca 2009 a : 28; see also Eves & Forsyth 2015; Strong 2017: 84). It should be noted, however, that witches are believed not to attack at random, but target those they are close to and who are members of their ‘hauslain’ or immediate community (see also Strong 2017: 81).…”
Section: The Papua New Guinea Contextmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Should future investigations drop "Pentecostal" as analytical category and refer to the groups hitherto studied under the name Pentecostal as part of either Catholicism or Evangelicalism? It seems that these questions are not limited to the Philippine context, (Blanes, 2017;Coleman, 2017;MacCarthy, 2017;Strong, 2017;Frahm-Arp, 2019;Le, 2018) and the absence of an emerging scholarly consensus on how to define Pentecostalism exacerbates the problem.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%