9/30/2020

 

Storytelling: Textiles 

As the use of the phrase “spinning a yarn” suggests, an association has long been made between weaving and storytelling. The word spinning was often found regularly in ancient Hindu texts including the Vedas, as Puntambekar and Varadachari (1926) described in their book Hand-Spinning and Hand-Weaving.


When the poet sings his invocation to Agni, he asks of the gods “to spin out the ancient thread”. The continuity of life itself and of the human race is compared to the continuity of a well-spun thread. ‘As fathers they have set their heritage on earth, their offspring, as a thread continuously spun out.’


It has been argued that all forms of art tell stories. Included among those forms of art are weavings. Weavers in the Andes, Silverman writes, “are modern scribes who use thread as opposed to pen and ink, to produce motifs in a true pictoric dictionary” (1993, 14). In Oaxaca, Mexico woven cloth is said to be a language used to tell stories.


The earliest evidence of weaving dates back some 27,000 years. Thaat earliest evidence  was found in impressions of weaving made on clay. Further, clay was used to create small “Venus figurines”, or small clay statuettes, that are wearing a large number of woven objects: skirts and belts, as well as hats, headbands and necklaces.


A prehistoric society in which some of the world's finest weavers lived was on the coast of Peru. Between 800 BCE and 100 BCE the Paracas people traded locally grown cotton for wool from  llamas and alpacas that were being raised by people in the Andes. 


They carefully spun the cotton and wood into fine thread and yarn. First, a cloth was woven out of plain cotton.  Brightly colored wool threads were used to decorate the fabric with embroidery depictions of costumed dancers, plants, double headed birds, pampas cats, llamas, fish, serpents, llamas carrying loads of vegetables, serpents, plants, mystical creatures including shamans who are part human and part eagle and who can fly through the air.  In one claw they hold severed human heads and the other claw held the knife that was used to cut off the head. 


The weaving woven in Paracas weavers has been found in tombs. Mummified bodies of the dead were wrapped in finely woven and skillfully and brightly embroidered mantles or shrouds. Even today, thousands of years later, the colors remain bright and the skill is obvious. The complexity of the weaving and the beauty of the embroidery communicated the social status, wealth, and social affiliation of the deceased. Two thousand years later those weavings can tell us stories about the Paracas people. They are telling us stories about their lives and concerns. 


9/14/2020

 

Storytelling: Performances, ceremonies, celebrations, and rituals

When we combine our storytelling with the other arts, we refer to that event using words like performance, ceremony, celebration or ritual. These words are used interchangable and their meanings can be confusing. Sometimes it is possible to distinguish the meaning of terms by looking at their etymology, or origin. 

Possibly the oldest of these terms is the word ceremony, which possibly was of Etruscan origin (8-3 century BCE). It came to English from the Medieval Latin word ceremonia, which referred to sacredness or holiness. 

The word ritual is a proto-European word that possibly came from Sanscrit (c. 1500-500 BCE), it came into usage around 1560 CE and made reference to a religious observance.

The next oldest word is celebration. Its root came from the Latin word celebrationem, which means numerous in attendance, possibly for a sacred event. 

As these three terms have the oldest origins and make reference to gatherings that are of a religious nature, it suggest that the earliest use of storytelling, when combined with the other arts, was a serious event, rather than merely a social or enjoyable event.  

Performance is the youngest of these words. It appeared in English during the late 15th century to refer to public entertainment. While the meaning of words can and does change over time, the word performance continues to be used in the same sense today. Operas and plays are performances. These events are held at certain times and certain places. The audience, except in the case of slapstick, typically sits quietly and its only participation is to, perhaps, quietly laugh or sigh, and certainly to applaud.

Rituals, ceremonies and celebrations also are typically scheduled on certain dates, at certain times. These events all are patterned, meaning they have recurring features, including starting with some sort of greeting or introduction and typically people in the audience participate in some way. These three words were, as stated before, used at least at one time to refer to a religious event. Although we used the term celebration to refer to sacred occasions, such as the Celebration of Mass, the term also is often used to refer to an event like a birthday party. Celebrations like birthday parties are patterned. They typically start with a welcome and the placing of the gifts in a pile. People then move to view the birthday cake. They then play games, then sing a happy birthday song, light the candles, then blow thee out, and then cut the cake and open gifts. The audience may cheer, shout or boo. Jokes might be told. The story told is about the birthday boy or girl. The art consists of the song, the decorations, perhaps crepe paper streamers, the gaily wrapped gifts. and the "best cloths' that participants often wear. 

Rituals and ceremonies are more serious events than celebrations. They are held in a place said to be special, such as an auditorium, or sacred, such as a mosque. Confucius felt that rituals transformed man from an individualistic ego into one characterized by strong kinship ties, generosity, diligence, earnestness, filial piety, fraternal duty, loyalty and sincerity.A graduation is referred to as a ceremony. It follows a pattern of steps, beginning when Pomp and Circumstance is played and the university marshall enters the room carrying a mace. The mace, which is about three feet tall and golden, is a symbol of governing authority. Then faculty and students file in and take their seats at the front of the room, before the stage. there is a welcome, some presentations are given, and the school song might be sung. A story will be told about the graduates, their future, and what they can contribute to their academic and society. The ceremony ends when diplomas have been awarded and then there is a recessional. Perhaps graduates will toss their caps into the air..the audience cheers.  The art consists of the caps and grown, the gonfaons, or banners carried to represent each college. A graduation party is celebration.  

A ritual typically is considered to be the most serious type of event, one that in some way - a song, a prayer, a blessing - invokes the supernatural. If a graduation mass is held, it is a ritual. If an invocation, or opening prayer, is recited at a graduation it becomes more like a ritual. A wedding, if no reference is made to religio u , or faith or the supernatural, is a celebration. If held in a church or other sacred place and the event is conducted by a minister or rabbi, it is a ritual. A wedding reception is a celebration.   

The type of art used with stories that are part of ceremonies differs from the art and stories used in rituals. Of the two, rituals are more patterned and special or sacred objects often are used and the story of their sacredness is described. Rituals also can involve reading from a sacred text and prayer, which is an appeal or attempt to call upon a supernatural entity. The stories told also can relate the importance of the event itself, the history of the sacred place and the sacred objects used, the miracles that have occurred and the deeds of the heroic or saintly individuals involved.  

Drums have played and in some cases continue to play an important role in ceremonies and rituals performed in many parts of the world. The sound of the drum, for some people, is said to be sacred. The Igbu of Nigeria use different types of drums play during the Eke Celebration. Participants arrive in decorated war canoes playing the egume drum. As they near the royal place the ufie, the king’s talking drum, calls to them, telling the stories of his great deeds. Each participant then stands, dances and recalls his own ancestors’ heroic deeds (Jackson 1968; see also Calame-Griaule 1986). “These drummers, Rattray (1916:134) writes, “are trained from childhood, and must not only be experts in drumming, but also have learned the traditions and genealogies of all the kings, and the folklore of the tribe as contained in the proverbs. “

A good description of a ritual comes from the istory of St. Thomas Becket, who was Archbishop of Canterbury during the Middle Ages. When his opinions clashed with those of King Henry II, he was killed by four of Henry’s knights while he knelt in prayer at the altar. In 1173 he was declared a saint after more than 700 miracles had been recorded as occurring at his tomb. For centuries, thousands of pilgrims traveled great distances to reach his Shrine. Today, pilgrims follow the Pilgrims Way for fifteen days (153) miles, from Winchester to the shrine at Canterbury. When they arrive they tour the cathedral singing hymns and stopping to pray at places connected with Becket’s life and death. His miracles are portrayed in beautiful stained glass windows. One shows the healing of Petronella of Polesworth, a nun who suffered from leprosy. She is shown bathing her feet in holy water while sitting on the tomb of St Thomas. At each window the relevant story of his life was recited

to be continued