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Mande potters & leatherworkers : art and heritage in West Africa / Barbara E. Frank.

Penn Museum Library DT474.6.M36 F73 1998
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Frank, Barbara E.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Pottery, Mandingo.
Leatherwork, Mandingo.
Mandingo (African people)--Industries.
Mandingo (African people).
Art, African--Africa, West.
Art, African.
Sex role--Africa, West.
Sex role.
Sexual division of labor--Africa, West.
Sexual division of labor.
Sex role in art.
West Africa.
Physical Description:
xvi, 192 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 29 cm
Other Title:
Mande potters and leatherworkers
Place of Publication:
Washington, D.C. : Smithsonian Institution Press, 1998.
Summary:
Among the Mande-speaking groups dispersed throughout much of West Africa, certain artists-including potters and leatherworkers -- form a spiritually powerful social class in which gender determines craft specialization. Ceramic water jars and cooking pots are made only by the wives and female relatives of blacksmiths. Leather objects such as knife sheaths, amulet cases, and, more recently, western-style shoes and bags are produced by male leatherworkers. While these objects display features common to those of other West African groups, the manner in which they are produced has remained distinctly Mande.
Analyzing the work of Mande potters and leatherworkers, Barbara E. Frank argues that studying craft technologies in addition to object styles is essential for reconstructing the art heritage of an ethnically complex region. Drawing on archaeological and historical evidence as well as her field research in Mali, she shows how tools and practices such as potters' use of convex molds and leatherworkers' adherence to specific knife blade shapes serve to distinguish the goods made by Mande artists from those of neighboring groups. She also discusses the pride that porters take in their healing and spiritual knowledge and the sense of difference between craftsmen who specialize exclusively in leatherworking and those who double as bards and musicians.
Examining the roles of Mande leatherworkers and potters in the rise and fall of empires, the development of trans-Saharan trade networks, and the spread of Islam, Frank questions the "one-tribe, one-style" interpretations that have dominated studies of West African art. Focusing on two traditions that have been little studied, Mande Pottersand Leatherworkers explores the complex, shifting relationships among the identities of Monde craftspeople, the objects they create, and the technologies they use.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
1560987944
OCLC:
37361654

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