Rendre compte de l'insaisissable

Agriculture in Senegal is predominantly rain-fed and depends heavily on meteorological services. Any information on future rainfall is therefore important for farmers to anticipate the delayed arrivals of rains or particularly dry years. In Sereer countryside (Fatick region), the Saltigui (diviners)...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Youssoupha Tall, Jeanne Riaux, Benjamin Sultan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire Éco-anthropologie et Ethnobiologie 2023-12-01
Series:Revue d'ethnoécologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/10439
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832095886389280768
author Youssoupha Tall
Jeanne Riaux
Benjamin Sultan
author_facet Youssoupha Tall
Jeanne Riaux
Benjamin Sultan
author_sort Youssoupha Tall
collection DOAJ
description Agriculture in Senegal is predominantly rain-fed and depends heavily on meteorological services. Any information on future rainfall is therefore important for farmers to anticipate the delayed arrivals of rains or particularly dry years. In Sereer countryside (Fatick region), the Saltigui (diviners) take part in this work of anticipating the rainy season through divination practices that enable them to predict the course of the coming rainy season. Through their annual ceremonies named Xooy, the Saltigui share the knowledge they have obtained both from the spirits and from their own knowledge of the land and its signs. Through an analysis of the Saltigui’s discourse and practices, this article adresses the assembly work on which the Saltigui’s ‘meteorological prediction’ is based. We demonstrate the Saltigui’s role as intermediary between the spirit world, the living world and the nature. Through their Xooy, the Saltigui convey and share a local knowledge, linked to a specific territory and stemming from a set of beliefs and practices rooted in history. This particular case allows us to consider ‘local ecological knowledge’ as a form of situated totality. On one hand, rain is perceived positioned as a facet of collective life, and not as a field of knowledge isolated from the rest of the village’s concerns. On the other hand, in addition to announcing the onset of the rainy season, the Saltigui also purify the physical and symbolic space prior to the rainy season, and then make proposals to ward off any harmful predictions. The predictive act must therefore be understood as part of a larger whole in which it takes on its full meaning. These observations prompt us to take a cautious approach to the contemporary project of integrating ‘local knowledge’ into modern forms of scientific forecasting.
format Article
id doaj-art-37b4d8ec7af54b1685ded9b96bbba2c5
institution Kabale University
issn 2267-2419
language English
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher Laboratoire Éco-anthropologie et Ethnobiologie
record_format Article
series Revue d'ethnoécologie
spelling doaj-art-37b4d8ec7af54b1685ded9b96bbba2c52025-02-05T16:24:46ZengLaboratoire Éco-anthropologie et EthnobiologieRevue d'ethnoécologie2267-24192023-12-012410.4000/ethnoecologie.10439Rendre compte de l'insaisissableYoussoupha TallJeanne RiauxBenjamin SultanAgriculture in Senegal is predominantly rain-fed and depends heavily on meteorological services. Any information on future rainfall is therefore important for farmers to anticipate the delayed arrivals of rains or particularly dry years. In Sereer countryside (Fatick region), the Saltigui (diviners) take part in this work of anticipating the rainy season through divination practices that enable them to predict the course of the coming rainy season. Through their annual ceremonies named Xooy, the Saltigui share the knowledge they have obtained both from the spirits and from their own knowledge of the land and its signs. Through an analysis of the Saltigui’s discourse and practices, this article adresses the assembly work on which the Saltigui’s ‘meteorological prediction’ is based. We demonstrate the Saltigui’s role as intermediary between the spirit world, the living world and the nature. Through their Xooy, the Saltigui convey and share a local knowledge, linked to a specific territory and stemming from a set of beliefs and practices rooted in history. This particular case allows us to consider ‘local ecological knowledge’ as a form of situated totality. On one hand, rain is perceived positioned as a facet of collective life, and not as a field of knowledge isolated from the rest of the village’s concerns. On the other hand, in addition to announcing the onset of the rainy season, the Saltigui also purify the physical and symbolic space prior to the rainy season, and then make proposals to ward off any harmful predictions. The predictive act must therefore be understood as part of a larger whole in which it takes on its full meaning. These observations prompt us to take a cautious approach to the contemporary project of integrating ‘local knowledge’ into modern forms of scientific forecasting.https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/10439agricultureknowledgeSenegaldivinationSaltiguipredictions
spellingShingle Youssoupha Tall
Jeanne Riaux
Benjamin Sultan
Rendre compte de l'insaisissable
Revue d'ethnoécologie
agriculture
knowledge
Senegal
divination
Saltigui
predictions
title Rendre compte de l'insaisissable
title_full Rendre compte de l'insaisissable
title_fullStr Rendre compte de l'insaisissable
title_full_unstemmed Rendre compte de l'insaisissable
title_short Rendre compte de l'insaisissable
title_sort rendre compte de l insaisissable
topic agriculture
knowledge
Senegal
divination
Saltigui
predictions
url https://journals.openedition.org/ethnoecologie/10439
work_keys_str_mv AT youssouphatall rendrecomptedelinsaisissable
AT jeanneriaux rendrecomptedelinsaisissable
AT benjaminsultan rendrecomptedelinsaisissable