Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen
Studies in African Diaspora ofen privilege the transatlantic slavery, Columbus’ discovery of the New World, and African cultural codes in the Americas. To expand the scope of the studies, this article examines the metaphysical and ontological questions on the enslavement of the Yorùbá – an African...
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
LibraryPress@UF
2021-12-01
|
Series: | Yoruba Studies Review |
Online Access: | https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/130081 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
_version_ | 1825206022609829888 |
---|---|
author | Emmanuel Adeniyi |
author_facet | Emmanuel Adeniyi |
author_sort | Emmanuel Adeniyi |
collection | DOAJ |
description |
Studies in African Diaspora ofen privilege the transatlantic slavery, Columbus’ discovery of the New World, and African cultural codes in the Americas. To expand the scope of the studies, this article examines the metaphysical and ontological questions on the enslavement of the Yorùbá – an African ethno-nation whose members were condemned to slavery and servitude in the Americas during the inglorious transatlantic slave trade. I used metaphysical fatalism as a theoretical model to interrogate prognostications about dispersion of the Yorùbá from their matrix as expressed in their mythology. Being a predestining agent, I examined the role of orí (destiny) within the context of rigid fatalism and its textualisation in Prince Justice’s Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen. The article argues that the transatlantic enslavement of the Yorùbá is a fait accompli willed by their Supreme Deity. Tough traumatic, transatlantic slavery reworlded Yorùbá cultural codes, birthed the Atlantic sub-group of the ethno-nation, and aided the emergence of Yorùbá-centric religions in the New World.
|
format | Article |
id | doaj-art-9795b786b52b424799fa7ac2b9ab1129 |
institution | Kabale University |
issn | 2473-4713 2578-692X |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021-12-01 |
publisher | LibraryPress@UF |
record_format | Article |
series | Yoruba Studies Review |
spelling | doaj-art-9795b786b52b424799fa7ac2b9ab11292025-02-07T13:45:10ZengLibraryPress@UFYoruba Studies Review2473-47132578-692X2021-12-0151.2Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave QueenEmmanuel Adeniyi0Federal University, Oye-Ekiti Studies in African Diaspora ofen privilege the transatlantic slavery, Columbus’ discovery of the New World, and African cultural codes in the Americas. To expand the scope of the studies, this article examines the metaphysical and ontological questions on the enslavement of the Yorùbá – an African ethno-nation whose members were condemned to slavery and servitude in the Americas during the inglorious transatlantic slave trade. I used metaphysical fatalism as a theoretical model to interrogate prognostications about dispersion of the Yorùbá from their matrix as expressed in their mythology. Being a predestining agent, I examined the role of orí (destiny) within the context of rigid fatalism and its textualisation in Prince Justice’s Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen. The article argues that the transatlantic enslavement of the Yorùbá is a fait accompli willed by their Supreme Deity. Tough traumatic, transatlantic slavery reworlded Yorùbá cultural codes, birthed the Atlantic sub-group of the ethno-nation, and aided the emergence of Yorùbá-centric religions in the New World. https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/130081 |
spellingShingle | Emmanuel Adeniyi Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen Yoruba Studies Review |
title | Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen |
title_full | Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen |
title_fullStr | Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen |
title_full_unstemmed | Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen |
title_short | Dispersion of the Yorùbá to the Americas: A Fatalist Hermeneutics of Orí in the Yorùbá Cosmos – Reading from Tutuoba: Salem’s Black Shango Slave Queen |
title_sort | dispersion of the yoruba to the americas a fatalist hermeneutics of ori in the yoruba cosmos reading from tutuoba salem s black shango slave queen |
url | https://ojs.test.flvc.org/ysr/article/view/130081 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT emmanueladeniyi dispersionoftheyorubatotheamericasafatalisthermeneuticsoforiintheyorubacosmosreadingfromtutuobasalemsblackshangoslavequeen |