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Title
Haunting Griaule: experiences from the restudy of the Dogon |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1887/9508 |
Date
2004 |
Author(s)
Beek,W.E.A.van |
Abstract
The author describes his experiences while repeating ethnographic research carried out by Marcel Griaule among the Dogon of Mali in the 1940s/1950s, and the work of one of Griaule's most important followers, Germaine Dieterlen. Griaule's 'Dieu d'eau' (1948) was a revelation at the time of its first publication: never before had the secrets of an African society been exposed so clearly in order to show a native philosophy on a par with what the Athenian and Indian civilizations had offered to humanity. However, the present author shows that Griaule fell into a trap: a combination of strong and overtly expressed personal convictions, with a position of authority backed by a colonial presence on his part, and on the Dogon side a small circle of crucial and creative informants, a clear courtesy bias and some monetary realism. The fact that there are no creation stories among the Dogon, at least not in the Griaulean sense, is crucial in this restudy. Bibliogr., notes, ref. [ASC Leiden abstract] |
Subject(s)
Mali; Dogon; anthropological research |
Type of publication
Article / Letter to editor |
Format
application/pdf |
Source
History in Africa: a journal of methodHistory in Africa, 31, 43 - 68 (2004) |
Repository
Leiden - African Studies Centre Leiden
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Added to C-A: 2008-12-22;03:49:20 |
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