Difference between revisions of "Yoruba identity in Nigeria"

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Colonial formation of local ethnicity:  the case of the Yoruba
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'''Colonial formation of local ethnicity:  the case of the Yoruba in Nigeria'''
  
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[[Image:250px-LocationNigeria.svg.png]]
  
Waterman:
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----
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''Some observations:''
  
"It appears that a
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* Pattern:  social internalization of external social grouping imposed by more powerful culture, absorbed as a hegemonic internalized structure.
good number of the societies represented in authoritative books about
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Africa...are
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* Constructions of ethnicity, implying a degree of homogeneity, often result from an outsider perspective, since the "homogeneity" of an  "ethnic group" is only "visible" from the outside.
at least in part the products of colonialism, which had to create its objects
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in order to control its subjects.'"
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* When the "outside" is powerful (i.e. colonialism, imperialism), the outside--vested in special interests--becomes the hegemonic insider perspective, though not without resistance.
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* Such homogenization is a useful tool for governance, colonial or otherwise, and its use often occurs within positions of power.
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* Thus the operation of "othering", when carried out from a position of superior power, may become a primary source of identity.  Yet such identities, once internalized, can also be revised to serve new ends, e.g. transformed into a tool of colonial resistance.
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----
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[[Formation of Yoruba identity]]
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[[Yoruba  neo-traditional popular music]]
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[[The role of neo-traditional Yoruba music]]

Latest revision as of 15:04, 25 September 2007

Colonial formation of local ethnicity: the case of the Yoruba in Nigeria

250px-LocationNigeria.svg.png


Some observations:

  • Pattern: social internalization of external social grouping imposed by more powerful culture, absorbed as a hegemonic internalized structure.
  • Constructions of ethnicity, implying a degree of homogeneity, often result from an outsider perspective, since the "homogeneity" of an "ethnic group" is only "visible" from the outside.
  • When the "outside" is powerful (i.e. colonialism, imperialism), the outside--vested in special interests--becomes the hegemonic insider perspective, though not without resistance.
  • Such homogenization is a useful tool for governance, colonial or otherwise, and its use often occurs within positions of power.
  • Thus the operation of "othering", when carried out from a position of superior power, may become a primary source of identity. Yet such identities, once internalized, can also be revised to serve new ends, e.g. transformed into a tool of colonial resistance.


Formation of Yoruba identity

Yoruba neo-traditional popular music

The role of neo-traditional Yoruba music