Saraka and Nation Icon
Saraka and Nation

Merle Collins

the project will trace connections between cultures of Africans in the Americas and sites of memory in Africa Concerned, thematically, with postcolonial cultural formations, and in particular the experience of the African Diaspora, the project will trace connections between cultures of Africans in the Americas and sites of memory in Africa.  Through investigation of aspects of contemporary hemispheric American culture – narrative traditions such as Ananse/folk stories of the southern United States and the Caribbean, capoeira dances of Brazil, Big Drum Nation Dance of Carriacou, Voudoun traditions of Haiti, Saraka and Shango/Orisha in Trinidad & Tobago and Grenada - the project will identify and establish contact with specific sites in Africa.  The Ananse stories of the U.S. South and the Caribbean suggest connections with Ghana, Brazil’s capoeira references Angola, saraka and Shango/Orisha have cultural references suggesting links with Yoruba traditions existing largely in what is contemporary Nigeria, songs and dances of the Carriacou Big Drum invoke  “nations” such as Temne, Ibo, Arada, Asante and Gaa (Kromantyn) - precolonial nations existing today in postcolonial nation states like Ghana, Sierra Leone, Senegal, Nigeria and Burkina Faso.

Done in collaboration with researchers in the Americas, Africa and Europe, the project (first phase) is already being used (spring 2008) for teaching in the humanities. 

Project Staff
  • Gregory Lord
    Web Designer & Web Programmer
  • Greg Jablonski
    Program Associate
  • Bini Tecle
    Program Associate
Project Images
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