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Gullah culture in America

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Greenwood Publishing Group, 2008 - Social Science - 269 pages

In 1989, 1998, and 2005, fifteen Gullah speakers went to Sierra Leone and other parts of West Africa to trace their origins and ancestry. Their journey frames this exploration of the extraordinary history of the Gullah culture-characterized by strong African cultural retention and a direct influence on American culture, particularly in the South-described in this fascinating book. Since long before the Revolution, America has had hidden pockets of a bygone African culture with a language of its own, and long endowed with traditions, language, design, medicine, agriculture, fishing, hunting, weaving, and the arts. This book explores the Gullah culture's direct link to Africa, via the sea islands of the American southeast.

The first published evidence of Gullah went almost unrecorded until the 1860s, when missionaries from Philadelphia made their way, even as the Civil War was at its height, to St. Helena Island, South Carolina, to establish a small institution called Penn School to help freed slaves learn how to read and write and make a living in a world of upheaval and distress. There they noticed that most of the islanders spoke a language that was only part English, tempered with expressions and idioms, often spoken in a melodious, euphonic manner, accompanied by distinctive practices in religion, work, dancing, greetings, and the arts. The homogeneity, richness, and consistency of this culture was possible because the sea-islanders were isolated. Even today, there are more than 300,000 Gullah people, many of whom speak little or no English, living in the remoter areas of the sea islands of St. Helena, Edisto, Coosay, Ossabaw, Sapelo, Daufuskie, and Cumberland. Gullah Culture in America explores not only the history of Gullah, but takes the reader behind the scenes of Gullah culture today to show what it's like to grow up, live, and celebrate in this remarkable and uniquely American community.

  

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Contents

1 Welcome Home
1
2 Catching the Learning
23
3 AQuantum Leap
43
4 Growing Up Gullah
59
5 Hallelujah
85
6 Healing and Folk Medicine
103
7 The Mellifluous Gullah Tongue
125
photo essay
149
9 Feasting the Stomach
173
10 Festivals and Celebrations
187
11 Music Song and Dance
201
12 Roots
221
Notes
237
Bibliography
245
Index
259
Copyright

8 Geography
150

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About the author (2008)

WILBUR CROSS is the author or co-author of more than 50 books and was an editor at Life for eight years.