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UNEVEN TERRAIN - Materialities of Ritual in the Black Atlantic. Edited by Akinwumi Ogundiran and Paula Saunders. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2014. Pp. xii + 404. $65, hardback (ISBN 978-0-253-01386-6).

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Materialities of Ritual in the Black Atlantic. Edited by Akinwumi Ogundiran and Paula Saunders. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2014. Pp. xii + 404. $65, hardback (ISBN 978-0-253-01386-6).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 June 2016

WYATT MACGAFFEY*
Affiliation:
Haverford College
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Abstract

Type
Reviews of Books
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2016 

This book originated in a symposium at the Society of Historical Archaeology in 2009. In their introductory chapter the editors say the contributors seek to show how objects, places, and landscapes assume agentive roles in rituals that contribute in everyday lives to cultural formation, identity, memory, and self-realization. Their approach embodies current trends, substituting a concern for historical context, creative bricolage, and situational specificity for a preoccupation with fixed ethnic identities and related questions of ‘authenticity’.

The editors review some of the many dichotomies that scholars have put forward to cope rationally with the apparently irrational (sacred/profane, ritual/ceremony, meaning/practice, and so on). They praise Catherine Bell's performative understanding of ritual and Charles Pierce's work on the social construction of meaning, and they refer briefly to Bruno Latour and Alfred Gell on the attribution of agency to objects that mediate social relationships, but it is difficult to discern the influence of any of these theorists in the book. Some of the contributors abuse their freedom from the old imperative to associate American traits with specific African peoples by reverting to the methods of nineteenth-century anthropology, hunting through a vast pan-Atlantic literature in search of traits, taken out of context, to support speculations about function and meaning.

The best demonstrations of the effects the editors intend are provided by the two final chapters: Cheryl LaRoche on the African Burial Ground in New York and the President's House in Philadelphia and Brempong Osei-Tutu on Cape Coast Castle. Both show how historical associations and powerful emotions govern the inscription of meaning on particular sites and lead to the creation of rituals that are simultaneously political statements and agencies of personal transformation. The contested interpretations of Cape Coast Castle, by the Ghanaian government on one side and groups of African American activists and pilgrims on the other, sensitively set out by Osei-Tutu, also prove that ‘meaning’ is not an intrinsic property but a function of an object's mediation of social relations. Akinwumi Ogundiran's own chapter on the role of cowries in Yoruba rituals of self-realization shows how the specific materiality of the shells, and their history in the Atlantic trade as a currency convertible against slaves, labor, and goods, ‘offered the most versatile intellectual resource to articulate, contemplate and interpret new experiences of individuality and personhood in multiple cultural domains’ (p. 78).

Other chapters vary greatly in quality. Some of the authors should have heeded the archaeologist Matthew Reeves, who deplores the tendency to exoticize finds that seem unusual to us and thus potentially ‘spiritual’ when in fact they may have been simply instruments of everyday life. ‘The presence of [such artifacts] has been heralded as representing everything from African survival to resistance against hegemonic patriarchy’ (p. 176). This advice also raises, of course, the question of how we are to distinguish between ‘ritual’ and ‘everyday life’, especially when ritual is credited with specific but unverifiable functions, all inevitably assumed to be beneficial.

One can sympathize with an archaeologist who, after much labor, needs to have something to say about an inscrutable object. It is not always possible to recover from local informants their memories of long-dead performances or to find help in archives. Grey Gundaker, who has had the advantage of being able to meet the African American makers of figurated ‘special yards’, nevertheless warns us against the hasty attribution of meaning and describes her own methodological precautions. Speculation may lead to valuable insights, but a plethora of ‘may haves’, ‘potentials’, ‘possibles’, and the like gives rise to the uneasy feeling that meanings are being inscribed on enigmatic objects in rituals of academic self-realization.

So, caveat lector, but there is much of interest here. Pablo Gómez mines Spanish inquisition archives for details of the lives and practices of healers, finding for example, that Pedro Congo learned much of his art from Yorubas after his arrival in Cartagena. Both Gómez and Danielle Boaz, writing about Obeah in the Jamaican legal system, comment on the interplay of African/slave practices and ideas with those of dominant Europeans, who until the late eighteenth century generally entertained beliefs similar to those they denounced. In his account of Hueda shrines Neil Norman finds archaeological evidence to connect the coming and going of vodun to the history of the Atlantic trade, and reminds us that the accumulative and improvisational nature of ritual assemblages did not originate in the Americas. He shares with other contributors some discomfort with the concept of ‘religion’: deities become ‘cosmological actors’ and prayer becomes ‘cosmological conversation’. Candice Goucher surveys the role of iron and its rituals from Bassari in Togo to Ogun in the Caribbean in the shackles of the slave trade; as a commodity in that trade; its increasing use on ships; and, its forging of identity in the Americas.