Carnival in Africa

IF 0.3 3区 艺术学 0 ART
AFRICAN ARTS Pub Date : 2022-11-17 DOI:10.1162/afar_a_00678
Amanda B. Carlson, Courtnay Micots
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

| african arts WINTER 2022 VOL. 55, NO. 4 Tourism-fueled economies in Africa and the travel industry produce photo-rich websites with seductive, color-saturated images that draw people to fabulous carnivals across the continent. These industries have vastly outpaced scholarly documentation of carnivals in Africa, which are often assumed to be an isolated and recent phenomenon, but in fact exist in all corners of the continent— Morocco, Cape Verde, Guinea Bissau, Côte d’Ivoire, Sierra Leone, Ghana, Togo, Nigeria, Cameroon, Angola, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Madagascar, Ethiopia, and Kenya to name a few. Some are very new—although usually built upon an existing performance tradition—while others, such as in Angola and Cape Verde, are thought to be centuries old. As carnival events are growing in popularity, we hope this collection of articles will encourage others (scholars, artists, communities) to join the party and experience the complexity of carnival in Africa. At this time, we know of only two full-length books about carnivals in Africa: Coon Carnival New Year in Cape Town: Past to Present (1999) by Denis-Constant Martin and Kakaamotobe: Fancy Dress Carnival in Ghana (2021) by Courtnay Micots. Many other carnivals are mentioned in disparate texts covering diverse regions and disciplines—a fair number published in African Arts. However, many references to carnivals in Africa fly under the radar because authors do not use the term “carnival” even when the event fits the definition of carnival or includes many characteristics of carnival. Until now, the literature on carnival has primarily focused on the Caribbean and Latin American epicenters. The weather vane of carnival history and theory indicates a strong wind blowing steadfast out of Trinidad & Tobago and Brazil (with carnivals that are well known among revelers and scholars alike), but this special issue hints at the vast scope of carnivals in Africa and the geographic decentering of carnival studies. The articles in this special issue demonstrate that Africa is not only a point of origin to explain diasporic performance traditions, Africa is also a place of return and reinvention—disrupting linear models of influence. Humans have found many reasons to form processions and dance in the street. Factors that contributed to carnivals in Africa include the Portuguese (early super-spreaders of Christian festivals and processions), emancipated returnees from the Americas, British maritime culture (suppliers of goods, ideas, and people among the Caribbean, Europe, and Africa), diplomatic programs and global festivals (e.g., the First World Festival of Negro Arts in 1966 in Senegal and FESTAC ’77 in Nigeria), and the intensification of globalization and shifts in the economy (moving from oil to tourism in Nigeria, for example). Another important piece of the puzzle is that festivals were almost always built upon the many preexisting performance traditions involving processions and masquerades. Carnivals in Africa are responses to multicultural societies and power dynamics within the continent. The articles in this issue cover a variety of performance events, and the authors—who come from diverse disciplines and are at various stages in their careers—address four festivals from the coastal region of West Africa. The case studies include long-established carnivals (Fancy Dress in Ghana), festivals of recent import from the Americas (Calabar Carnival in Nigeria), older festivals that have become carnivals (Batanga Carnival in Cameroon), and annual festivals that tap into carnivalesque elements yet are not carnivals per se (Epé Ekpé festivals in Togo). Even so, these case studies are a small slice of a much larger story that could potentially shift how we look at carnival and the trajectory of research moving forward.
非洲嘉年华
|2022年非洲艺术冬季第55卷,第4期。旅游业推动的非洲经济和旅游业制作了照片丰富的网站,其诱人的、色彩饱和的图像吸引着人们参加整个非洲大陆的精彩狂欢节。这些行业远远超过了非洲狂欢节的学术文献,非洲狂欢节通常被认为是一种孤立的近期现象,但事实上存在于非洲大陆的各个角落——摩洛哥、佛得角、几内亚比绍、科特迪瓦、塞拉利昂、加纳、多哥、尼日利亚、喀麦隆、安哥拉、南非、津巴布韦、马达加斯加、埃塞俄比亚和肯尼亚等等。有些是非常新的——尽管通常建立在现有的表演传统之上——而另一些,如安哥拉和佛得角,则被认为有数百年的历史。随着狂欢节活动越来越受欢迎,我们希望这本文章集能鼓励其他人(学者、艺术家、社区)加入派对,体验非洲狂欢节的复杂性。目前,我们只知道两本关于非洲狂欢节的长篇书籍:丹尼斯·康斯坦特·马丁的《开普敦的库恩狂欢节新年:过去到现在》(1999年)和考特尼·米科特的《卡卡莫托贝:加纳的奇装异服狂欢节》(2021年)。许多其他嘉年华会在涵盖不同地区和学科的不同文本中被提及——相当多的文本发表在《非洲艺术》上。然而,许多对非洲狂欢节的提及都被忽视了,因为作者没有使用“狂欢节”一词,即使该活动符合狂欢节的定义或包括狂欢节的许多特征。到目前为止,有关狂欢节的文献主要集中在加勒比海和拉丁美洲的震中。狂欢节历史和理论的风向标表明,特立尼达和多巴哥和巴西刮起了强风(狂欢节在狂欢者和学者中都很有名),但这期特刊暗示了非洲狂欢节的广泛性和狂欢节研究的地理分散性。本期特刊中的文章表明,非洲不仅是解释散居表演传统的起点,也是回归和重塑的地方——颠覆了线性影响力模型。人类已经找到了许多理由来组织游行和在街上跳舞。促成非洲狂欢节的因素包括葡萄牙人(早期基督教节日和游行的超级传播者)、从美洲解放出来的回归者、英国海洋文化(加勒比、欧洲和非洲的商品、思想和人员供应商)、,外交项目和全球节日(例如,1966年在塞内加尔举行的第一届世界黑人艺术节和77年在尼日利亚举行的FESTAC),以及全球化的加剧和经济的转变(例如,尼日利亚从石油转向旅游业)。另一个重要的谜题是,节日几乎总是建立在许多先前存在的表演传统之上,包括游行和化妆舞会。非洲的狂欢节是对非洲大陆多元文化社会和权力动态的回应。本期文章涵盖了各种表演活动,作者来自不同的学科,处于职业生涯的不同阶段,他们在西非沿海地区的四个节日上发表了演讲。案例研究包括历史悠久的狂欢节(加纳的花式连衣裙)、最近从美洲进口的节日(尼日利亚的卡拉巴尔狂欢节)、已成为狂欢节的旧节日(喀麦隆的巴坦加狂欢节),以及利用狂欢节元素但本身不是狂欢节的年度节日(多哥的EpéEkpé节日)。即便如此,这些案例研究只是一个更大故事的一小部分,可能会改变我们对狂欢节的看法和研究的发展轨迹。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
33.30%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: African Arts is devoted to the study and discussion of traditional, contemporary, and popular African arts and expressive cultures. Since 1967, African Arts readers have enjoyed high-quality visual depictions, cutting-edge explorations of theory and practice, and critical dialogue. Each issue features a core of peer-reviewed scholarly articles concerning the world"s second largest continent and its diasporas, and provides a host of resources - book and museum exhibition reviews, exhibition previews, features on collections, artist portfolios, dialogue and editorial columns. The journal promotes investigation of the connections between the arts and anthropology, history, language, literature, politics, religion, and sociology.
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