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Asen, Ancestors, and Vodun: Tracing Change in African Art

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Asen, metal sculptures of southern Benin, West Africa, are created to honor the dead and are meant to encourage interaction between visible and spiritual worlds in ancestral rites associated with the belief system known as vodun. Drawing on extensive fieldwork in the former Kingdom of Dahomey, Bay traces more than 150 years of transformations in the manufacture and symbolic meanings of asen against the backdrop of a slave-raiding monarchy, domination by French colonialism, and postcolonial political and social change.

Bay expertly reads evidence of the area's turbulent history through analysis of asen motifs as she describes the diverse influences affecting the process of asen production from the point of their probable invention to their current decline in use. Paradoxically, asen represent a sacred African art form, yet are created using European materials and technologies and are embellished with figures drawn from tourist production. Bay’s meticulously researched artistic and historical study is a fascinating exploration of creativity and change within Benin’s culture.

208 pages, Hardcover

First published February 8, 2008

25 people want to read

About the author

Edna G. Bay

12 books

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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1,439 reviews30 followers
April 26, 2024
It was good, and more scholarly than others I read on the same general topic of ancestor worship -- which is closer to "honor" rather than "worship", but c'est la vie.
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