4.2 Article

Variation and Persistence in Latin American Beliefs About Evil Eye

Journal

CROSS-CULTURAL RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 174-203

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1069397114539268

Keywords

evil eye; mal de ojo; Latin America/Latino; consensus model; age-area hypothesis

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [BNS-920455, SBR-9727322, BCS-0108232]

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In a comparative study of evil eye (mal de ojo), we demonstrate a methodology appropriate for the study of cultural transmission of beliefs. We studied four diverse populations with historical links to Spain: Puerto Ricans in Connecticut, Mexican Americans in south Texas, Mexicans in Guadalajara, and rural Guatemalans. Using agreement on ideas or themes about evil eye within and across sites, we identify specific ideas that may have persisted through time. The relevance of specific themes was estimated with a cultural consensus analysis. Mal de ojo was widely recognized in each community and higher community prevalence was associated with higher agreement on reported causes, symptoms, and treatments. Each community exhibited a distinct model for ojo, although models were highly similar between sites. Agreement among individuals and across communities suggests a pan-regional description for mal de ojo and possible content of older versions of these beliefs in Latin America.

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