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Divining Value: Cowries, the Ancestral Realm and the Global in Southern Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2019

Abigail Joy Moffett
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town, Private Bag 7701, Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa Email: [email protected]
Simon Hall
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town, Private Bag 7701, Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa Email: [email protected]

Abstract

The global distribution of cowrie shells (Monetaria annulus and Monetaria moneta) attests to their exchange over long distances and their value in diverse cultural contexts. In addition to their commodification, cowries functioned as adornment, ritual, art and in the elaboration of both living and ancestral beings in many settings through time. Examining the circulation and usage of cowries in these different contexts facilitates an exploration of the ways in which a global commodity may carry, lose and acquire value. An ethnographic review of cowrie use in the hitherto overlooked context of southern Africa suggests that particular qualities of the shell imbued it with culturally specific value. It is suggested that cowries, as part of divination sets, were active in divination because of their white colour and their origin in the (maritime) ancestral realm that anchored divination in notions of ancestry, fertility and healing. Furthermore, in certain contexts, cowries were conceived of as animate objects, metonymically active in ‘cooling’ and healing. These observations, set within a broader discussion relating to archaeological approaches to the accumulation of value, indicate the importance of exploring alternative ontologies in the biographies of global commodities, and reveal the potential of a biographical ontology of the ‘ancestral’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research 2019

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