SCI-CULTURA
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29 African Artworks To See Before You Die
Posted: October 26, 2008, 9:57 pm by sci-culturist
This post is a re-mix of The Guardian’s 1000 artworks to see before you die. I like this article by Jonathan Jones because he alludes to what I consider to be 2 essential issues with regards to African works of art: a) There’s an abundance of African ‘art’ sitting in Euro-American museums (British Museum, I am pointing [...] -
Film::Africa
Posted: October 22, 2008, 7:26 pm by sci-culturist
The London Film Festival is underway and I spotted a few African films (8 to be precise) whilst trawling through the programme guide. So what African stories are being told at the pictures this year? Divizionz: Uganda-South Africa (Dir Yes! That’s Us) An authentic portrayal of Kampala’s inner city, in which 4 friends set out to make it [...] -
Film::Diaspora
Posted: October 19, 2008, 4:53 pm by sci-culturist
Diaspora Diaries (directed by Ghanaian-British all round artist Robert ‘Beyonder’ Asare) is an engaging docu-film that captures the broad meaning of the term and experiences of the people who refer to themselves as the African Diaspora by exploring the thoughts and opinions of a wide range of people of African ancestry born in East and [...] -
Poverty: You and I are the Solution
Posted: October 15, 2008, 11:39 pm by sci-culturist
Warning: This is not about wallowing in the ‘poverty in Africa’ cliché but superficially examining what went wrong and more importantly how you and I can fix it. Starting today. First, let’s be clear, we are talking about economic poverty as Africa is full of other diverse riches which I believe this blog is a witness [...] -
Africa + Funky Trendy Cool Popular Culture = Pop’Africana
Posted: October 15, 2008, 2:21 am by sci-culturist
I’m a bit late with this post, but there are so many wonderful on-goings in the Afroculture domain that I can barely keep up! And that’s a good thing. , the Africana global book of style, is a bi-annual fashion.art.style magazine that recently had its online debut (hat tip Afripop!). Pop’Africana is a collaborative effort which aims [...] -
Fe-la-bration Time C’Mon!*
Posted: October 13, 2008, 3:20 am by sci-culturist
If there’s a time to be in Naija, it would be during the annual celebration of the late Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s life, due to peak on 18th October. This year he would have been 70. Imagine that. Femi and Seun are guaranteed to be in Lagos celebrating their father’s life alongside a distinguished list of [...] -
Our Stories Told By Us
Posted: October 10, 2008, 3:53 pm by sci-culturist
As we evolve and define, reassess, re-evaluate and re-define our identity as a nation, the thing called Kenya (46 years old this December and therefore relatively young), it is crucial that we grapple with our contradictions and influences, both ‘traditional’ and ‘modern’ that may be internal and/or external both on a micro and macro level, [...] -
Things that make you go hmmm…
Posted: October 7, 2008, 12:38 am by sci-culturist
I was on iTunes when I was struck by the Confrontation album cover. I love Kehinde Wiley’s work, but clearly Bob was wayyy ahead of his time (although this album was released posthumously in 1983, 2 years after his death). -
Traditional African Spirituality.::.Africa to Latin America and the Caribbean to Going Global to Africa
Posted: October 6, 2008, 4:34 am by sci-culturist
Keeping in with the Afro-Latino theme from my previous post, the London Lucumi Choir will be performing at the Royal Festival Hall on 12th October 2008.
Having taken part in their workshop during the recent Open Rehearsal Weekend (part of the Cultural Olympiad), I have no doubt it will be an exhilarating experience to be in a room awash with animated songs of praise to Orishas (deities) of the Yoruba tradition, to a rhythmic accompaniment of Afro-Cuban percussion including Batá drums.
The word ‘Lucumi’ derives from Yoruba and is how the Yoruban people used to salute each other in Cuba in the early days of slavery: it roughly translates as ‘My friend’. These days, the word Lucumi is used to describe the practitioners of the religion Santeriá or Regla de Ocha (the rule of the Orishas), a religion now spread worldwide which has its roots in West Africa.
The fascinating thing, I find, is the literally and metaphorically arduous journey that frequently ill-understood Traditional African Spirituality that was exported from West and Central Africa through the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, took to Latin America, was absorbed and integrated by virtue of the strength of the bearers and descendants of this tradition, and inevitably evolved and manifested into distinct but related forms – Candomblé in Brazil, Santeriá in Cuba, Haitian Voodoo, amongst others - through the organic syncreticism of a ‘pure’ African practice with the then current local culture and tradition, which constituted the indigenous populations (aka ‘Indians’) and the Roman Catholic faith imported by the Spanish Conquistadores.
These newly formed, unique religions in their own right (aka New World religions), have since been exported by significant numbers of the Latino and Caribbean diaspora, e.g. to the USA, thus inevitably spreading their practice to non-Caribbean / non-Latino converts. Interestingly, on the African continent, Benin is the only country that recognises Voodoo as its official religion.
If it hasn’t yet been assessed, it would be a fascinating ethnographic enquiry to explore the exportation of these Afro-Latino / Afro-Caribbean religions to Africa or their practice by Africans in the diaspora. Afterall, the merging of Christianity with Traditional African Spirituality is not a novel concept in post-colonial Africa. (Any ideas Native Anthropologist?)
Quoting Anani Dzidzienyo whose sentiments accurately resonate with mine,
That these institutions moved from the clandestine to the marginal to their present day status as national institutions [in Latin America] is indeed remarkable.
For me, the survival and proliferation of these syncreticised religions with African roots is even more jaw-droppingly remarkable as I reflect on my personal circumstance as an East African who went to a Catholic primary school in Nairobi and had a short stint in not-overtly-Catholic-’modern’ Spain, participating in a West African-via-Cuba spiritual tradition that emanated from a region that was historically colonial French West Africa (i.e. Dahomey), conducted in an archaic West African patois that has since evolved, in the former HQ of the British Empire. In addition, the London Lucumi Choir is itself a cosmopolitan mestizo of various nationalities. If this is not a powerful attestation to globalisation, then I don’t know what is.
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Latin America and the African connection
Posted: October 5, 2008, 11:20 pm by sci-culturist
Cinema of Brazil: Afro-Brazilian Perspectives is a film festival at the Barbican that seeks to celebrate ‘the nation’s foremost Afro-Brazilian actors, directors, intellectuals and musicians’. This is one of the features of the Brazil season in London, courtesy of the Brazilian embassy that is ‘adding a splash of [welcomed, needed, appreciated and valued] colour to [...]
Blah blah blah
Fish cakes
Alas a fish cake.
Yet more fish cakes
Guess what ... yeah ... fish cakes.
The end of the fish cakes