
New Books in History Katharine Gerbner, "Archival Irruptions: Constructing Religion and Criminalizing Obeah in Eighteenth-Century Jamaica" (Duke UP, 2025)
Mar 24, 2026
Katharine Gerbner, Associate Professor of History and Director of Religious Studies at the University of Minnesota, explores how Obeah was framed and criminalized in eighteenth-century Jamaica. She traces Moravian missionary archives, explains her method of identifying archival “irruptions,” and recounts fieldwork with Maroon communities. The conversation centers on archival discovery, methodological innovation, and the colonial making of religion.
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How Obia Was Recast From Seer To Crime
- Obia shifted from a prophetic, seer-like practice to a criminalized "wicked art" after Tacky's Revolt in 1760.
- Katharine Gerbner traces this change using a 1755 Moravian letter where Zachariah Carey reports Afro-Jamaicans calling him Obia, revealing earlier meanings.
The Carey Letter That Opened The Puzzle
- A 1755 Moravian letter records Africans calling missionary Zachariah Carey "Obia," meaning a seer who knows the future.
- This single pre-1760 reference is unique in describing Obia outside witchcraft or conjuring frameworks.
Microhistory As A Tool To Reinterpret Archives
- Microhistory let Gerbner pursue one puzzling archival reference in depth rather than cover centuries.
- She used Moravian records to test how far a focused archive reading can overturn colonial narratives.




