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Women, Music, and the “Mystique” of Hunters in Mali

Duran, Lucy

Authors

Lucy Duran



Contributors

Ingrid Monson
Editor

Abstract

In his study of Maninka and Bamana hunters’ initiation societies (donsotonw), the Malian scholar Youssouf Tata Cissé quotes a significant line from one hunter’s song text: dunun nègè be sogo faa bali la (Those who don’t hunt are crazy for hunters’ music!) (Cissé 1994:207.3 Despite the fact that, in Mali, game is now scarce and protected by legislation, the cultural traditions and moral values of hunters’ societies continue to be of deep symbolic importance for contemporary Malians. The mere sight of a hunter, dressed in the traditional hunter’s cap and tunic of mud-dye cloth, conjures images of Mali’s glorious past, going back to the master hunter (simbon) Sunjata Keita, the founder of the Mali (Mande) empire in 1235.

Citation

Duran, L. (2000). Women, Music, and the “Mystique” of Hunters in Mali. In I. Monson (Ed.), The African Diaspora: A Musical Perspective (137-86). Garland Publishing. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203493052

Publication Date Jan 1, 2000
Deposit Date Dec 9, 2007
Pages 137-86
Book Title The African Diaspora: A Musical Perspective
ISBN 9781138177895
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203493052


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