Taylor & Francis, Ltd. Journal of African Cultural Studies
Taylor & Francis, Ltd. Journal of African Cultural Studies
Taylor & Francis, Ltd. Journal of African Cultural Studies
Form
Author(s): Wendy James
Source: Journal of African Cultural Studies, Vol. 13, No. 1, In Honour of Professor
Terence Ranger (Jun., 2000), pp. 140-152
Published by: Taylor & Francis, Ltd.
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Journal ofAfrican Cultural Studies, Volume 13, Number 1, June 2000, pp. 140-152 iIsz
WENDY JAMES
(Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Oxfor
1. Introduction
An older generation of anthropologists, and historians too, tended to treat dance (together
with music and song and even 'ritual') as something of an add-on 'cultural extra' to the
serious study of the structural base and political form of society. In anthropology today,
the living, felt, and performative aspect of social life has moved centre stage, even to the
point where phenomenology, embodied experience, and subjective engagement has
almost displaced the older search for contextual pattern, system, and explanation. The
main problem for many anthropologists, especially the historically-oriented among us, is
to retain our sense of the connectedness of form through time while acknowledging the
powerful subjectivities which define the individual and collective experience of any one
moment. In respect of the dance (and associated music and song), Terry Ranger's study
of the Beni ngoma (1975) offers real inspiration here. His analysis does not treat the
marching dance in isolation as a cultural phenomenon, examining its internal
performance for its own sake, nor does it account for the Beni ngoma with reference
simply to the content of other ceremonials, rituals, or dances in the manner of the
specialist cultural historian. It seeks the links between the dance form as such, and the
changing shapes of the non-dance arena - that is, of everyday life and of political
structures. Formal patterns in the dance and the non-dance domains can affect each other:
ISSN 1369-6815 print; 1469-9346 online/00/010140-13 ? 2000 Journal of African Cultural Studies
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Social history of an African dance form 141
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142 Wendy James
of 'Hofriyat' in the northern Sudan, where the zar spirit possession cult exists as a
defining frame of life for the women. It is practised side by side with Islam, its rituals
linked in a sort of counterpoint not only with the male sphere of Islamic religious
authority but also with the standard public rituals of marriage, circumcision, and
childbirth. Or at least this was the case in the 1980s; the current regime in Khartoum has
reportedly banned the zar, though in a few regions of the eastern Sudan where there are
still Eritrean refugee camps the zar is still held. Women who happen to be Sudanese
nationals apparently sometimes escape the new and strict Islamic authorities, leaving
their own villages to join the refugees for the special zar rites. This not only brings into
sharp focus the performative and bodily forms of marginality and resistance, but also the
way in which political authority has again and again claimed the spiritual and moral high
ground, if not prohibiting then at least undermining the power of competing performative
practices by restricting, co-opting, or trivializing them.
Also in the Sudan, Gerd Baumann (1987) has shown how the people of Jebel Miri in
the Nuba Hills, a community distinctly more 'marginal' than Hofriyat, were living in the
1970s with an even more profound pluralism, a kind of double morphology in their
perfomance of national and local styles of dance and music. A large proportion of the
men were labour migrants in the towns; many were Muslims, spoke good Arabic, and
were familiar with the music and dance of the northern Sudan. Even back at home in
Miri, although the mother-tongue of Miri was still vital, many women also knew some
Arabic, and the young girls would play and sing Arabic romantic love songs (daluka)
they had learned in some local market place or from the radio. But when the men
returned home on leave, they joined in the local harvest songs and music, and when the
young girls married, they had to forsake the Arabic love songs for Miri grindstone songs
and other 'autochthonous' forms. Baumann argued that a balance had been reached in
Miri between local and national 'identity' and that musical practices reflected this
balance. While this was no doubt an apt way of seeing the plurality of Miri's social life at
that time, Miri has since been destroyed by civil war, which is a reminder that any state
of 'balance' must be fragile and that a picture of the competing rise and fall, convergence
and divergence of practices, genres of dance and music, and aspects of 'identity' would
often serve us better. In the peripheral regions of the south-eastern Sudan, bordering
Ethiopia, this has certainly been the main pattern.
This discussion is mostly devoted to the shifting varieties of dance, music and
parading in the displaced camps and refugee schemes of the Sudan-Ethiopian border -
mainly the communities of Uduk-speaking Sudanese with whom I have had intermittent
contact since my original fieldwork in the Blue Nile province in the 1960s. One of the
most persistent choreographic forms among them, common to several genres of music
and dancing style, is that of an all-embracing circle, with the musicians in the middle and
the dancers, men, women and children, circling around in a great anti-clockwise sweep.
A key variant of this form (at least in the way people talk, though it was scarcely
performed in the villages when I used to stay there) is the barangu, a dance which figures
in the myths of prehistory, when all the creatures came to join in with their different
stepping rhythms around the players with the calabash flutes. It was at this great dance,
sometimes represented as taking place in the sky, that many defining events happened; it
was even here that the first great enmity broke out between human beings and the rest of
the animals. Other circling dances, which were frequently performed in the 1960s,
included the athele' (with beaten logs and flutes) and bolshok (flutes only). There is
some evidence that choreography of the great moving circle was once widely established
in the hilly regions of the upper Blue Nile and along the Ethiopian escarpment to the
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Social history of an African dance form 143
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144 Wendy James
Secular dance became at one and the same time a medium of assimilation and of
political expression. 'For the African, dance was both a means to camouflage
insurrectionary activity as well as other kinds of resistance behavior; for the masters it
was a means to pacify the desire of their bondsmen to rebel' (ibid). Some slave masters
even allowed 'praise houses' and permitted their bondsmen to hold 'shouts' as well as
secular dancing. Festivities were often allowed at Christmas, though Hazzard-Gordon
quotes one source as disapproving 'the strolling about of Negroes for a week at a time,
during what are called Christmas Holidays' as it was productive of much evil; '[f]rom
considerations both of morality and needful rest and recreation to the negro, I much
prefer a week in July, when the crop is laid by, to giving three days at Christmas' (ibid:
111). Weekends offered some opportunities too. 'Some masters even purchased slave
musicians to provide music' (ibid). African-style instruments were often made or
improvised; an ex-slave recalled how they would make a fiddle-gourd with horse-hair
strings (as still found in West Africa). 'When we made a banjo we would first of all catch
what we called a ground hog, known in the north as a woodchuck. After tanning his hide,
it would be stretched over a piece of timber fashioned like a cheese box, and you couldn't
tell the difference in sound between that homely affair and a handsome store bought one'
(ibid: 112). Slave masters provided the opportunity for slaves to dance, even though it
violated their religious principles; 'these occasions were certainly intended as
opportunities for them to buy into the contract of their own oppression', but it was 'clear
from the amount of insurrectionary activity that took place during slave holidays ... that
the role of dance ... was not limited to escapist entertainment' (ibid: 113). This is why
drums were forbidden, and different instruments had to be substituted, ones that would
not be seized - and could not be used to incite or signal rebellion. Interplantation dances
were a particular source of worry to the slaveocracy; there is ample evidence of plotting
on such occasions, 'giving these occasions a striking resemblance to war dances, or
dances in which preparation for battle was the central theme' (ibid: 114). There were
large public dances on the edge of towns, and while plantation owners tried to restrict the
movement of their slaves, it was in these public spaces that the African-American dance
could be celebrated. Crowd control was difficult; Hazzard-Gordon quotes some vivid
eye-witness accounts from 18th-century South Carolina. Another account from a
Louisiana resident reads:
Nothing is more dreaded than to see the Negroes assemble together on Sundays, since under
pretence of Calinda, or the dance, they sometimes get together to the number of three or four
hundred, and make a kind of Sabbath, which it is always prudent to avoid; for it is in those
tumultuous meetings that they sell what they have stolen to one another, and commit many
crimes. In these likewise they plot their rebellions (ibid: 116-7).
By 1817 in New Orleans, dancing was restricted to Sundays before sundown at one place,
Congo Square.
This story of American dance history is not one of total prohibition, but of attempts
over three centuries to restrict, reshape, and effectively to co-opt dancing, to co-opt it into
the usefully productive rhythms of work, and to allow it into the social lives of the slav
communities as part of a package which (mostly) kept the peace. This story is full of
ironic echoes for the history of dance in other regions marked by a history of slavery an
by modern forms of military enlistment, forced labour, forced migration, force
settlement, and other kinds of imposed social control which allow no space for dancing
and even fear it as subversive. The most subversive-seeming form, perhaps because it
articulates a private hidden centre, certainly appears to be the closed circle. It is quite
striking that the circular form has not only survived, but is now deliberately celebrated
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Social history of an African dance form 145
The village is in a state of great agitation; fifty armed negroes, blowing on antelope horns,
come to dance around us and shake their spears. But when I walk towards the people and, in
a friendly but firm way, slap them on the shoulder and take one horn to show that I, too, can
make music like this, they turn more friendly.
The music lasts throughout the night; heard from a distance, it is quite similar to a
European brass-band which gets stuck in the first bars of an overture without ever
progressing to the melody (Schuver 1996: 315).
Later on, in 1882, Schuver describes a 'tremendous wardance' in a Gumuz village of the
Blue Nile.
A poorly clad minstrel dominating the crowd from a boulder, sang a ditty which strongly
reminded me of the Castillian muleteer. At the chorus all joined raising their lances, shields
and boomerangs above their heads, while dozens of youthful couples executed all around a
'pas de ballet' so voluptuous, that is better seen than described.
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146 Wendy James
... but one of the ugliest musical instruments conceivable, consists in a round, nutlike
fruit of the size of a nut, four rows of which roughly fastened together, formed the clumsy
and absurd anklets of many a fair dancer (ibid: 194).
There really is some doubt as to whether these performances were 'war-dances' in quite
the way that Schuver indicated; the first could just have been some kind of welcome to a
visiting dignitary, and the second seems to have been some kind of celebration. Both
dances are described as moving 'around', which suggests the circular form.
However, when followers playing local instruments made of calabashes, horns, nut-
like fruits, and so on are brought in by various kings, chiefs and war leaders for purposes
of display and extra accompaniment to the regular marching instruments, the
choreography of their performance is quite changed. For example, the drum and bugle
certainly played an important part in the regular armies of both Turco-Egyptian and
Mahdist regimes in the Sudan. But in addition, the presence of slave soldiers was marked
by their musical contribution to ceremonial occasions using rather different and distinct
instruments of their own. The Khalifa Abdallahi's jihadiyya (slave soldiers) brought
antelope horns with them. Slatin described how the Khalifa would occasionally parade
around the town of Omdurman:
The melancholy notes of the ombeija [trumpet] and the beating of war-drums announce to
the inhabitants that their master is about to appear in public ... A square is immediately
formed around [the Khalifa]; and the men advance in front of him in detachments, ten or
twelve abreast. Behind them follow the horse and foot men of the town population, while on
the Khalifa's left walks an immensely powerful and well-built Arab named Ahmed Abu
Dukheka, who has the honour of lifting his master in and out of the saddle. On his right is a
strongly-made young Black, who is chief of the slaves in the royal stables. The Khalifa is
immediately preceded by six men, who alternately blow the ombeija by his orders. Behind
him follow the buglers, who sound the advance or halt, or summon, at his wish, the chiefs of
the mulazemin. Just behind these follow his small personal attendants, who carry the Rekwa
(a leather vessel used for religious ablutions), the sheepskin prayer-carpet, and several
spears. Sometimes, either in front or rear, as the case may be, follows the musical band,
composed of about fifty Black slaves, whose instruments comprise antelope-horns, and
drums made of the hollow trunks of trees covered with skin. The strange African tunes they
play are remarkable rather for the hideously discordant noise they make than for their
melody. These rides are generally undertaken after midday prayer ... (Slatin 1896: 528-9).
The Khalifa had been active in the Bahr el-Ghazal before the Mahdist uprising, in the
context of the trading and slave companies, and had already taken possession of the great
Zande long drum. Various kinds of drums were already well established in the political
and military ceremonial of the Sudan: the Turco-Egyptians brought in the bugle, the snare
drum, and the kettle drum; copper kettle-drums were carried in any campaign or parade
of the various Pashas.
For the twentieth century, Major Cheeseman recorded both the local circling dance
form and its restructuring by official authority in western Ethiopia. His first encounter on
the way down the Blue Nile in 1927 was at the Dura river:
In the evening a negro chief with his band of musicians carrying weird instruments appeared
on a friendly visit ... The officer who was escorting me was an Amhara official ... who had
been placed in charge of the Negroes by the Abyssinian Government. ... He seemed on very
good terms with the Negroes, and greeted the chief by giving one hand which the latter took
in both of his. The official then raised his own hand to his lips and kissed it. The Negro
saluted me by bending forward and touching the ground with both hands.
The musical instruments of the band were from four to five feet in length and were made
from the narrow part of calabashes joined together. Some were held straight in front of the
player like coach-horns and others sideways like flutes, but in both kinds the mouthpiece was
at the end. The musicians danced while they played, stepping in time to the rhythm and
swaying the body (Cheeseman 1936: 336-7).
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Social history of an African dance form 147
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148 Wendy James
Eventually we learned that the dances were not always so harmless. A dance which
followed a beer drink lasted until dawn, or sometimes for forty-eight hours, and was lewd
and sensuous. Men and women, boys and girls, danced opposite one another, motioning
erotically. Old men, nearly blind, shuffled around the outside of the circle as they kept time
by tapping their sandals on the hard ground. Middle-aged people danced for a while, then
went to sleep, and even women with babies saddled to their backs danced, the baby rocking
to the harsh drumbeat [sic]. Young married people felt the impelling beat of the drums [sic]
and danced feverishly.
Often a dance was the beginning of illicit courtship, broken marriages, and polygamy.
Men and women would disappear into the night and the next day in the village the first and
second wives would prepare for battle over possession of the man. The dance was especially
suited to the restless impulses of the young people, who danced wildly as the drums [sic]
waxed hotter at midnight and beyond. The older people would go home and the younger
ones would pair off and disappear in the bush (Forsberg 1958: 152-3).
Forsberg comments that 'We did not want our gospel to be negative, but we were dealing
with matters beyond our control'; he told the people, 'God doesn't want us to behave like
animals'. The Forsbergs were horrified to find their own infant son imitating the dance
beat and the flute playing. 'We were suddenly brought face to face with the results of our
living in Africa. The dance, like the snakes around us, had turned up inside our house.'
The little boy would join with playmates in the village imitating the dance band, until the
'witchdoctors' called a halt to the dancing when locusts came during the rains. The
Forsbergs kept closer supervision over their son, and prayed more earnestly for the
'coming into being of a strong Christian community at Chali' (ibid: 153). On the dust-
jacket of the book, the publishers gave even more of a dramatic emphasis to the Uduk
dance: 'Here is a great Christian adventure - the story of a young couple who dedicated
their lives to primitive African tribes, and who found romance, drama, and excitement
such as few experience ... The Uduks were not only frankly polygamous, drank hot beer,
and held unspeakable ritualistic dances, but also practiced rites that included murder'
(ibid: inside front cover).
The dance described by Forsberg was the athele', not much of a ritualistic affair at
all, but on the whole rather secular, at least when I came to know it in the 1960s.
Occasionally it was danced at the death commemoration ritual for a senior person, and it
is true that the instruments were ceremonially 'blessed' when first brought out for a
season, but otherwise the athele' was danced for recreation. There were no drums,
despite Forsberg's repeated evocation of the heady image of 'African drums' in his
writing. His initial phrase 'dance blocks' is a more sober description of the set of curved
and slightly smoothed out logs beaten for the athele '. The missionaries maintained their
opposition to this dance, which became an icon of the paganism they were struggling
against, even though it was not a form of dancing centrally linked with spirits,
'witchdoctors' or significant ritual practices. Among the Uduk themselves, the dance as
such came to signify the old ways; to 'return to dancing' was shorthand for having left
the discipline of the church. At the same time, it was immaterial for the question of
allegiance to 'pagan' practices and beliefs whether one danced or not. In this overall
situation, it is scarcely surprising that far from falling into obsolescence, the dance
remained as vigorous as ever, even gaining a kind of extra vitality and symbolic
resonance because it was so frowned on by missionaries. With the departure (by
government order) of the missionaries in early 1964, church discipline fell away
somewhat, and the dance scene was certainly a lively one during my visits from late 1965
to mid-1969.
There was still, during this period, however, some pattern and discipline to the
athele'. In the outlying hamlets, the pattern was for one village to take out the
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Social history of an African dance form 149
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150 Wendy James
I was able to revisit Chali and the outlying villages briefly in 1983. The dominant
change seemed to be that the younger generation had switched over to Christianity, and
there were a lot of small bush churches operating. Another feature that struck me was the
popularity of gymnastic exercises among the young men in the area I knew well. There
were parades and marches and whistles, along with the exercises. It took me a little while
to realise that what the youths were doing was imitating the training they had seen at the
military garrison recently established in Chali. Was there dancing? If so, it was not very
conspicuous; the fashion that year, at any rate, was for Christian activities such as
football and hymn singing, as I had seen in 1967, when there was a brief season's
Christian revival (James 1988a: ch. 4; 1988b). However, I think there was even by 1983 a
loosening of the moral rigidities that defined dancing as non-Christian and evil. I think it
likely that there was occasional athele' dancing.
In 1987, when the civil war came to the Blue Nile and all the villages in the southern
part of the province were destroyed by the Sudanese army, a large proportion of the Uduk
crossed the border to a new refugee camp near Assosa. Here, I am told that the athele'
dancing resumed. In the light of what came later, this period was relatively comfortable,
until the advance of anti-Mengistu forces led to its evacuation in early 1990. I have told
the story elsewhere of the years of flight and disaster since then (James 1994, 1996). Here
I should note simply that as far as I could learn, from 1990 there was no dancing of the
'traditional' circular type until about three years later in the Ethiopian transit camp of
Karmi, and then again in the refugee scheme at Bonga. Some of the young lads, however,
had taken up the popular Sudanese daluka playing, and singing, and I saw this in the
temporary camp of Nor Deng back in the Sudan in 1991. Individuals did perform dance
steps here and there, but no wheeling dance formation developed.
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Social history of an African dance form 151
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152 Wendy James
themselves, to celebrate a self-referential centre of their own, and to turn their backs on
spectators.
WENDY JAMES can be contacted at the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology,
University of Oxford, 51 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 6PE; email:
Wendy.james @ anthro.ox.ac.uk.
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