Dan Ge Performance: Masks and Music in Contemporary Côte D'Ivoire

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Indiana University Press, Aug 21, 2003 - History - 212 pages

Ge, formerly translated as "mask" or "masquerade," appears among the Dan people of Côte d'Ivoire as a dancing and musical embodiment of their social ideals and religious beliefs. In Dan Ge Performance, Daniel B. Reed sets out to discover what resides at the core of Ge. He finds that Ge is defined as part of a religious system, a form of entertainment, an industry, a political tool, an instrument of justice, and a form of resistance—and it can take on multiple roles simultaneously. He sees genu (pl.) dancing the latest dance steps, co-opting popular music, and acting in concert with Ivorian authorities to combat sorcery. Not only are the bounds of traditional performance stretched, but Ge performance becomes a strategy for helping the Dan to establish individual and community identity in a world that is becoming more religiously and ethnically diverse. Readers interested in all aspects of expressive culture in West Africa will find fascinating material in this rich and penetrating book.

 

Contents

Talking about Ge
1
On the Road to Man
17
Coexistence Cooperation and Conflict in the City of Eighteen Mountains
31
When a rooster goes for a walk he does not forget his house The Tradition and Identity in a Diversifying Context
47
What Is Ge?
67
Manifesting Ge in Song
101
Drums as Instruments of Social and Religious Action
129
Gedro at Gueheva
149
Gegbade at Yokoboue
157
Pathways of Communication and Transformation
171
GLOSSARY
177
NOTES
181
REFERENCES
195
INDEX
207
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Daniel B. Reed is Director of the Archives of Traditional Music and Assistant Professor of Folklore and Ethnomusicology at Indiana University, Bloomington. He is co-author (with Gloria Gibson) of the CD-ROM Music and Culture in West Africa: The Straus Expedition (Indiana University Press).

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