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Some Spirits Heal, Others Only Dance : ウィキペディア英語版 | Some Spirits Heal, Others Only Dance
''Some Spirits Heal, Others Only Dance: A Journey into Human Selfhood in an African Village'' is an anthropological study of the ''ngulu'' cult among the Lungu people of Zambia authored by the anthropologist Roy Willis. It was first published in 1999 by Berg Publishers. In the book, Willis discusses his own personal experiences with both the ''ngulu'' ceremonies of spiritual healing and the beliefs in malevolent ''muloozi'' sorcerers. ==Background== In 1993, Willis unsuccessfully applied to the Economic and Social Research Council (ESCR) to obtain funding for an anthropological expedition to study spirit possession in Zambian Ulungu. In 1995, he successfully submitted a re-formulated application influenced by the ideas of Anthony Cohen and Edith Turner, who argued that anthropologists should not dismiss people's belief in spirits from a western rationalist perspective. The following year, he returned to Ulungu, where he obtained three Lungu research assistants, and together they observed and filmed five ''ngulu'' rituals in Ulungu.
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