@article{oai:mizuho.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000336, author = {松岡, 陽子 and MATSUOKA, Yoko}, issue = {13}, journal = {瀬木学園紀要, Segigakuen Kiyo}, month = {}, note = {The Mau Mau, the insurgent group, is famous for the struggle for independence in Kenya. It was consisted of the three tribes, the Kikuyu, the Embu and the Meru. The Mau Mau had expanded rapidly from the late 1940s to the early 1950s by performing its original oaths. The British colonial government issued an emergency declaration in 1952 and started the Mau Mau war. The two contradictory discourses about the oaths have come up since the war. One is that the oaths were bestial; the oath takers in the rituals had intercourse with women or animals, licked the blood of women's menses, killed persons as sacrifices and so on. The other is that the Mau Mau never performed such oaths as above, they say there are no evidences and they were just rumors. Which is true? In this paper, I will take up the rumor over the Mau Mau oaths and then focus on the narrative of my informant who took the Mau Mau secret oaths. The Mau Mau war has been discussed mainly from viewpoints of the Kikuyu and the colonial government. However, what happened to the Embu during the war was not necessarily the same as the Kikuyu. I will try here to give a new perspective by reviewing the circumstances in Embu at that time.}, pages = {3--13}, title = {マウマウの宣誓をめぐる語り -1950 年代のケニアで行われた儀式の噂-}, year = {2018}, yomi = {マツオカ, ヨウコ} }