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Songhay as Stage
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17218 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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2 / 1990 |
6,220 Words |
| Author
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Judith Gleason Judith Gleason has done field research in African religions
for the last twenty years. Her most recent book is Oya: In
Praise of the Goddess. |
FUSION OF THE WORLDS
An Ethnography of Possession among the Songhay of Niger
Paul Stoller
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989
244 pp., $19.95
IN SORCERY'S SHADOW
Paul Stoller and Cheryl Olkes
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987
236 pp., $19.95
He arrives in an old Berliet truck, which sputters to a stop at the western corner of Mehanna's market - Mehanna is a Songhay village located on the west bank of the Niger River. The truck is immediately surrounded by children pointing and chanting a word meaning "European" in their language. Undaunted, the young anthropologist opens the door on the passenger side of the cabin and steps down onto the sand. The undisciplined children, gaping in silence, now surround the stranger's unarmored person. In response, he opens his mouth to utter in his "best oratorical Songhay" a proverbial question posed ironically over the children's heads to adult bystanders, "Are people who stare at other people any different from donkeys?" Whereupon the elders come forward to introduce themselves and to compliment the stranger upon his astonishing fluency in their language. Modestly, he demurs: "But I do not speak Songhay, really. I hear a little." Thus, con brio, Stoller's and Olkes' account of a fascinating apprenticeship begins.
The "arrival scene" leads the reader into
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