“Does the white(caucasian) man understand our custom about land?”
Monday, April 16, 2012
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Dear Reader
As you look through this blog you will see many activities
in which can be shown through the eyes of a teenager. The views of their
culture and this book. To show the ideas of the past which should continue to
be held a high standards
Overview
Receiving in the detail the intake of the similarity and
contrast within the book Things Fall Apart and the cultural background of the
Ibo culture. We can say that this book shows a lot of the cultural details seen
before colonization of Nigeria began and how it affected a character Okonwo as
he sought to find a way out of strangers taking away what he worked so hard
for. This classic tale compared to a culture of today which is still rich and
should be preserved
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Traditional wedding
At this stage, a date has been agreed for the ‘Igba Nkwu’ to hold at the paternal home of the bride to be. The intending groom would have been handed a list of items to present at the engagement. The list usually is communicated after the introduction and is an obligatory part of completing the Igba Nkwu, which could either be a close family event or a big event including the whole “village”. The items on the lists are usually symbolic and cover different sections of the ceremony.
http://www.namywedding.com/articles/8-the-igbo-traditional-wedding
Igbo Mask
"Igbo culture embraces the idea of a wide variety of gods, rather
than being exclusive to one or several gods. This spiritual diversity promotes
a great richness and dynamism in their ceremonies and worship. In the artwork
surrounding their worship, there is a great emphasis on process rather than
product, because the Igbo view the former as motion whereas the latter implies
rest. This love of motion is evident in their masquerades in which the audience
follows and often dances and shadows the dancersÕ movements. This particular
mask belongs to the mmwo men's secret society of Nigeria, representing dead
young wives. The face is whitened with kaolin; white is the symbolic color of
death. The dancers did not merely represent, but were believed to be, the spirit
of the dead. During a ceremony, they disguise their voices, aiming, to induce
the dead man's spirit world (ebe mno) so to avoid any harm to the survivors."
http://www.spelman.edu/bush-hewlett/African_Art/igbomask.html
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