1. Fighting Ebola in the Shadow of Conspiracy Theories and Sorcery Suspicions
- Author
-
Syna Ouattara and Nikolas Århem
- Subjects
History ,060101 anthropology ,Ebola virus ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0507 social and economic geography ,Outbreak ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,06 humanities and the arts ,Development ,Guinea conakry ,Criminology ,medicine.disease_cause ,050701 cultural studies ,West africa ,Single infection ,West african ,medicine ,0601 history and archaeology ,Shadow (psychology) - Abstract
The Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa claimed more than 11,000 lives between 2013-2016. The source is believed to have been a single infection of a small boy, caused by contact with a bat. A huge international effort was mobilized to stem the spread of the disease. However, these efforts were hampered by a strong and sometimes violent resistance against the relief workers. This article focuses on the resistance in Guinea, arguing that the resistance was fueled by conspiracy theories, often originating in urban centers and communicated via social media. The conspiracy theories then merged with local sorcery beliefs, producing narratives in which Ebola relief workers and local politicians were presented as implicated in a sinister occult plot.
- Published
- 2021
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