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The Knot and the Coil: African Reaffirmations in Sea Island Baskets
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# : |
17974 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
5 / 1990 |
4,231 Words |
| Author
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Mary Arnold Twining Mary Arnold Twining is a lecturer in the English department at
Buffalo State College, Buffalo, New York. |
Located along the coasts of South Carolina and Georgia, the Sea Islands extend almost four hundred miles from the southern border of North Carolina to the northern borer of Florida. The islands themselves, actually part of the coastal plain, are readily accessible by sea through the streams and the riverine, brackish marshes that separate them from the mainland. Some of the islands are located far enough out to be accessible only by boat, while others have been connected to the mainland since the 1930s by bridges or causeways. The continuing inaccessibility of such rural islands as Sapelo and Daufuskie perpetuates the isolation that has so significantly operated to preserve the folklore and culture of the Sea Island area.
Accounts written in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries tended to stress the exotic nature of the islanders' custom, and these attitudes survive today. This is not entirely surprising to Sea Islanders, who, although native to the United States, actually manifest - in their speech, customs, and general manner of life - features that show greater affinities to the Afro-Caribbean populations and to indigenous African peoples than do other Americans of African origin.
The region has a long history of exploration and appreciation. Spanish explorers such as Lucas Vasquez came to Florida and Saint Helena Island in the 1520s. French Huguenots were not far behind the Spanish adventurers; they arrived in Port Royal in the 1560s, seeking to escape persecution at home, much as the English did in the following century.
Like the Caribbean, the Sea Islands became the site of large plantations worked by gangs of enslaved
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