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Hello Friends,

We continue this week with three versions of the story of how the Bamaya Dance of the Dagomba came into being. The Bamaya is a popular Dagomba dance which features men dressed as women, performing a dance which, depending on the origin story you believe, started as a desperate bid to appease angry gods, or emerged from the mockery of an unfortunate thief.

The word Bamaya means, “The river valley is wet” and given the origin stories, I have so many questions and theories but, anyway, here is a picture of a Bamaya dancer!

Can’t Get Enough?

* Watch a short performance of the Bamaya dance below.

* Another Bamaya performance

* More about the Bamaya Dance

References

* Cameron, Elisabeth L. “Men Portraying Women: Representations in African Masks.” African Arts, vol. 31, no. 2, 1998, pp. 72–94. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/3337523. Accessed 15 July 2024.

* Epprecht, Marc. Boy-wives and female husbands: Studies in African homosexualities. State University of New York Press, 2021.

* Resario, Rashida. "The visible and the invisible in the visual culture of the Ghana Dance Ensemble." Visual Cultures of Africa. Germany, Waxmann, 2022. p49

* Welsh-Asante, Kariamu, ed. African dance: An artistic, historical, and philosophical inquiry. Africa World Press, 1996. p16

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