Gullah's Trabbels

Presenter Information

Khadija Kamara, Independent Scholar

Event Type

Presentation

Location

EHFA 137

Start Date

6-3-2020 9:00 AM

End Date

6-3-2020 10:30 AM

Description

According to Aisha Turman, Barnard Library Research Award Recipient 2015-2016: "Afrofuturism is a result of and a response to the Transatlantic Slave Trade with particular roots in Gullah Geechee culture." The Gullahs, descendants of enslaved Africans from the western and central regions of the continent, preserved elements of various languages, rituals, customs, and traditions that were lost to most of those who were enslaved in the Americas. Through the memory of DNA, the Gullahs sustained the tradition of initiation through the coming of age practice of "seekin' and strivin'". Through research, Kamara illustrates how this practice mirrors the Poro and Sande secret societies of Liberia and Sierra Leone. She shows the Gullah people as the cultural curators of tribal cultures through the interpretation of the ancient ethnoastronomy of the Dogon in Mali. The influences on the Gullah from this ethnoscience inform their interpretation of the cosmos and astronomical phenomena such as the blood moon and solar eclipses. Finally, the isolation of the Gullah people on the sea islands preserved and informed the purest version of these customs outside of continental Africa. Furthermore, Kamara asserts, the practice of ring shout and funerary rituals of shaking off spirits are the Gullah's response to continuing the mysticism of tribal cultural heritage.

Comments

Theme: Magic, Mysticism, Afrofuturism, and Ways of Knowing; Moderator: Shari Orisich, Coastal Carolina University

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Mar 6th, 9:00 AM Mar 6th, 10:30 AM

Gullah's Trabbels

EHFA 137

According to Aisha Turman, Barnard Library Research Award Recipient 2015-2016: "Afrofuturism is a result of and a response to the Transatlantic Slave Trade with particular roots in Gullah Geechee culture." The Gullahs, descendants of enslaved Africans from the western and central regions of the continent, preserved elements of various languages, rituals, customs, and traditions that were lost to most of those who were enslaved in the Americas. Through the memory of DNA, the Gullahs sustained the tradition of initiation through the coming of age practice of "seekin' and strivin'". Through research, Kamara illustrates how this practice mirrors the Poro and Sande secret societies of Liberia and Sierra Leone. She shows the Gullah people as the cultural curators of tribal cultures through the interpretation of the ancient ethnoastronomy of the Dogon in Mali. The influences on the Gullah from this ethnoscience inform their interpretation of the cosmos and astronomical phenomena such as the blood moon and solar eclipses. Finally, the isolation of the Gullah people on the sea islands preserved and informed the purest version of these customs outside of continental Africa. Furthermore, Kamara asserts, the practice of ring shout and funerary rituals of shaking off spirits are the Gullah's response to continuing the mysticism of tribal cultural heritage.