conference
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Africa Knows! It is time to decolonise minds
Accepted Paper: D28a-03.
To panel D28a.
Title of paper:
In search of the hero: the Fumo Liyongo legend and its recurrent re-explorations
Long abstract paper: My first aim in this presentation is to consider the dynamic history of adaptation in the 19th, 20th and 21st century, when more coherent narratives were forged out of episodes and song cycles. Secondly, I will also take a look back at the more ancient poems, which are difficult to date: They were first committed to writing in the 19th century, but have been dated back to the 12th, 14th or 16th century. I would like to focus on those poems, which have rather been neglected in more recent adaptations, since they did not seem to add to the Liyongo narrative. Differently from both later Liyongo narratives and the Islamic poetry of later centuries, they are not plot- or argument-driven, but evoke still lives of the material culture of the coast, including fruits, plants, scents and attire. Their powerful language creates sensory links to the mainland and the Indian Ocean, open up another view on the complex history of encounter at the coast and suggest a different notion of poetics (typically neglected in the context of later narratives).
* This conference took place from December 2020 to February 2021 * |