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The Social Life of Mafia Confession: Between Talk and Silence in Sicily

Exploring Sicilian secular confessions, this essay discusses anthropological impasses on talk and silence. Such dilemmas reveal ethnographic frailties in engaging with concealment and revealing. The delicacy of negotiating between those demanding silence (the mafia) and those demanding self-revelati...

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Published in:Current anthropology 2018-04, Vol.59 (2), p.167-191
Main Authors: Rakopoulos, Theodoros, Benadusi, Mara, Ben-Yehoyada, Naor, Herzfeld, Michael, Muehlebach, Andrea, Palumbo, Berardino, Pine, Jason, Schneider, Peter, Schneider, Jane, Sorge, Antonio, Vereni, Piero
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container_title Current anthropology
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creator Rakopoulos, Theodoros
Benadusi, Mara
Ben-Yehoyada, Naor
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Schneider, Jane
Sorge, Antonio
Vereni, Piero
description Exploring Sicilian secular confessions, this essay discusses anthropological impasses on talk and silence. Such dilemmas reveal ethnographic frailties in engaging with concealment and revealing. The delicacy of negotiating between those demanding silence (the mafia) and those demanding self-revelation (the antimafia activists) unsettles the fieldwork ethics of our own anthropological entanglement in the gray areas of fieldwork between silence and talk. I show that pentiti (mafia confessants) blur the area between mafia and antimafia, allowing people to navigate across institutional categories. What is more, the essay embeds Sicilian confession in an intellectual genealogy, comparing mafia confession with its Christian counterpart and with bureaucratic theodicy. The move of confessional material of mafiosi and ordinary Sicilians from a private exchange to the public sphere recalls comparisons with religious ritual. While acknowledging the effects of confession on the mafia person, akin to the religious experience as a path to change and a new self, the essay suggests that secular confession should be approached through the lens of its effects on the lives of others. Its secularism is not imbued in an institution as much as it is invested in the life trajectories it inspires, often in the face of punishment.
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); NORA - Norwegian Open Research Archives; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; University of Chicago Press Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Activism
Bureaucracy
Confession
Confessions
Ethics
Fieldwork
Genealogy
Impasses
Organized crime
Public sphere
Punishment
Rituals
Secularism
Silence
Social life & customs
Theodicy
title The Social Life of Mafia Confession: Between Talk and Silence in Sicily
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