Exploring bori as a site of myth in Hausa culture

Author: Sullivan, Joanna

Source: Journal of African Cultural Studies, Volume 17, Number 2, Number 2/December 2005 , pp. 271-282(12)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

The very topic of myth has rarely emerged in Hausa studies due to the lack of conventional mythic material. This article looks at how myth emerges not in Hausa literature, but in the spirit possession ceremony known as bori. Unlike traditional myths, bori is a performed event accompanied by musicians who sing diverse and creative praise-epithets and songs to and about the spirits, and the spirit possession ceremony possesses only a marginally standard form. Enveloped by ritual, the performance itself is unique in each particular manifestation, with only vaguely predictable elements confining its realization. It is here, within the performance, guided by tradition, an aetiological origin, and a stable pantheon of spirits, that we find myth communicating itself, mediating between a host of binary opposites, emerging and then disappearing with the close of each performance.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13696850500448378

Affiliations: 1: ENNL Department, PCC-Rock Creek, 17705 NW Springville Road, Portland, tOR, 97229

Publication date: 2005-12-01

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