The photographs on these
pages were taken during anthropological and
linguistic field work with the Kujamaat Jóola. My work was textually
oriented. I recorded and transcribed texts, worked through grammatical
categories, compiled lexical entries and carried out long interviews about
the recordings. I also investigated aspects of their religious symbolism.
My major outings into the wider world were to record singing sessions and
to interview knowledgeable specialists. For the most part my field work
entailed sitting for hours on end huddled over a tape recorder, badgering
informants for details about the subleties of complex discourse. There was
precious little that was "visual" about my work.
Since high school I have been what can be called a "shutterbug," and came to Africa with a Leica (M2, 50mm Summicron lens), several cartons of film and a determination to photograph. There was no intended connection between my linguistics and anthropology and my photographs. With the camera I wished to record what struck me about my new friends and their world, what I could not have been able to record verbally and certainly not in the formal discourse of linguistics and anthropology.
The Kujamaat (others call them the "Fogny") who number about 90,000 live to the North of Bignona the seat of the Prefecture of Bignona. They speak one dialect out of a group called collectively the Jóola language and ethnic group. When speaking to strangers or non-Jóola they refer to themselves as such. However to stress their particular self and place they will insist on themselves as Kujamaat (sg. Ajamaat), their language as Kujamutay and the region they inhabit the Kajamutay.
The set is divided into five sections - fank, home; ewań,
cultivation; bugįar, a secular dance; futamp, boys' initiation; and
ebun, a festival for out-married women. (The Kujamaat are virolocal in
marriage.)
Clicking on the image map will take you to the appropriate top page thence to
the images. Move from image to image by clicking on the arrow at the bottom of the page. To
see an elarged picture, click on the image itself. To return to the section page
click on the up/down arrow.
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