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Top : Society : Religion and Spirituality : African : Diasporic :
Hoodoo, Rootwork, Conjure, Obeah

Websites
An online book by Catherine Yronwode. Included are descriptions of how to burn candles and incense, sprinkle powders, make mojo bags, prepare spiritual baths and floor washes, perform spells and take off jinxes.
http://www.luckymojo.com/hoodoo.html

A brief introduction to UCLA's holdings of the collected papers of the folklorist Harry M. Hyatt, who interviewed hoodoo practitioners throughout the South during the 1930s and again in 1970. The site contains sound clips and transcripts from a 1970 interview with The Healer Sarheed.
http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/folklore/special/

An archive of texts by Charles W. Chestnutt, Joel Chandler Harris, and Mary Alice Owen that mention African-American hoodoo beliefs that derive from African religious sources. Also included at the site are extracts from Mark Twain's works that mention European-American witchcraft beliefs.
http://etext.virginia.edu/railton/projects/riedy/texts.html

A New World name of an Ancient African Magical Tradition.
http://www.MamiWata.com/hoodoo.html

An occultist's compilation of views on Jamaican Obeah, stressing magical aspects and minimizing religious ones, with extracts from W. Somerset Maugham and Azoth Kalafou.
http://www.angelfire.com/electronic/awakening101/obeah.html

Anthony B. Pinn of Macalester College provides scholarly examples of how hoodoo and other African-based religious practices form a "second stream" within African-American Christianity, forcing a recognition of theological complexity beyond the merely folkloric or religio-magical orientation of conjure.
http://www.mamiwata.com/hoodoo4.html