Jump to content

Jonkonnu parades: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m traditions cat
same thing isn't it?
 
(62 intermediate revisions by 45 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT [[Junkanoo]]
'''Jonkonnu''', '''Junkanoo''' '''Jonkanoo''', '''Jankunu''', '''John Canoe''' or '''Johnkankus''' is a musical street [[Masquerade ceremony|masquerade]], believed to be of [[West Africa]]n origin, which occurs in many towns across the [[Caribbean]] every [[December 26]] and [[New Year's Day]]. The largest parade, [[Junkanoo]], happens in [[Nassau, Bahamas|Nassau]], the capital of the [[Bahamas]].

==Origins==
The etymology is disputed, but the celebration may have been named for a West African chieftain or shaman among the Papaws or Popos tribes of [[West Africa]] in the early 1700's. Recorded names have included ''King John Conny'', ''Prince Jean Konnu'' and ''dzon'ku nu'' (an African sorcerer persona plus "nu" meaning "man"). Brought to the Americas in the slave trade the tradition survived during the slave off days of Christmas night and New Years.
The practice bears great resemblance to Pre-Christian European [[animist]] or "[[mumming]]" traditions that survived into the 18th century as Christmas traditions. A notable survivor being the Celtic [[Wren day]]. Both the Jonkonnu traditions and the Mummer's involved covering the face in soot or ash, dressing in fanciful animal like garments such as the Cow Head and the [[Hobby horse|Hobby Horse]], and parading the streets with music before dawn on December 26th. The soot or ash has since been interpreted by many as representing race and has also been frowned upon in some cultures.

==Junkanoo in the Bahamas==
The '''Junkanoo''' street [[parade]], occurs in many towns across [[The Bahamas]] every [[December 26]] and [[New Year's Day]]. The largest Junkanoo parade happens in [[Nassau, Bahamas|Nassau]], the capital.

December 26th, Junkanoo groups "rush" from midnight until shortly after dawn, to the music of cowbells, in [[costume]]s made from cardboard covered in tiny shreds of colourful crepe [[paper]], competing for cash prizes.

Major musical groups involved in the Nassau Junkanoo have included The Saxons, The Valley Boys, The Roots, [[One Family]] and as of late the Prodigal Sons. Groups of the past included the [[Vikings (band)|Vikings]] and [[Music Makers]].

A Junkanoo parade is featured in sequences of the [[James Bond]] film ''[[Thunderball (film)|Thunderball]]'' that occur in Nassau. The celebration was staged specifically for the movie since it was filmed at the wrong time of year, but local residents were enthusiastic, creating elaborate floats and costumes and involving hundreds of people. The parade was also featured in ''[[After the Sunset]]'' and ''[[Jaws The Revenge]]''.

Junkanoo is also a fruit-flavored [[Soft drink|soda]] produced by [[PepsiCo]] and is only available in The Bahamas, and also a modernized style of music sung by Bahamian band [[Baha Men]].

==Jankunu (or [[Wanaragua]]) in Belize==
In [[Belize]], Jankunu is a satirical dance where individuals dress like colonial slave masters and dance off beat to a fast tempo drum 4/4 beat. Because of a thin mustache and black hair, the mask of what is most likely [[Spaniard]] is worn. The dance is associated with [[Garifuna]] culture, however [[Kriol|Belizean kriol people]]s, and East Indians participate in the practice.

==Jonkonnu in Jamaica==

Jonkonnu, or Jonkanoo (John Canoe) is parade that links music, dance, symbols and
mime. It is a Jamaican [[traditional]] [[dance]] form of [[African descent]].
Typically Jamaican’s would parade in the streets and enact [[mime]]-style
plays. This folk form has gone through many stages off development until
today when it is rarely performed on the [[island]]. In the early stages there
was the introduction and adaptation of the celebratory parade, then in the
1770’s the European influence developed (set girls); after emancipation
the British influence was more obvious. Today, Jonkonnu is only seen at
cultural fairs and in very rural parts of the island.

The Jonkonnu [[festival]] is secular in nature and used to be performed at
Christmas. It was the festive opportunity afforded to the [[slaves]] by the
[[planter]] class, [[Christmas]] was one of the few times that slaves were
relieved of their duties.

The Characters :
Core participants;
Pitchy patchy,
The cowhead,
The horsehead,
The devil,

Other participants
The [[King]],
The [[Queen regnant|Queen]],
The [[police]],
[[Belly]] woman,
[[France|French]] set girls

The characters parade through the streets in very elaborate costumes; they
are attired costumed with head dresses, masks, pitch forks (devil), batons
(police), fans (set girls) and any other paraphernalia that is necessary
to complete the character.

There basic jonkonnu steps that are done and each character has a
signature movement. E.g

Pitchy Patchy – turns, cartwheels, large movements in circular patterns.

Belly woman - moves belly in time with the music

==John Canoe in North Carolina==
The practice was once common in coastal [[North Carolina]], where it was called John Canoe, John Koonah, or John Kooner.
It may have influenced the Gulf Coast [[Mardis Gras]].

Historian Stephen Nissenbaum describes the ritual as it was performed in 19th-century North Carolina:
{{quote|Essentially, it involved a band of black men–generally young–who dressed themselves in ornate and often bizarre [[costume]]s. Each band was led by a man who was variously dressed in animal horns, elaborate rags, [[drag (clothing)|female disguise]], [[Blackface#Related forms|whiteface]] (and wearing a [[Wig (hair)|gentleman's wig]]!), or simply his "Sunday-go-to-meeting-suit." Accompanied by music, the band marched along the roads from [[plantation]] to plantation, town to town, accosting [[whites]] along the way and sometimes even entering their houses. In the process the men performed elaborate and (to white observers) grotesque dances that were probably of African origin. And in return for this performance they always demanded money (the leader generally carried "a small bowl or tin cup" for this purpose), though [[whiskey]] was an acceptable substitute.|Nissenbaum 1997, 285}}

Nissenbaum likened john canoe to the [[wassailing]] tradition of [[Britain in the Middle Ages|medieval Britain]], seeing in both a ritualized inversion of the established social [[hierarchy]] that provides, simultaneously, a temporary suspension and powerful reaffirmation of that hierarchy. Wassailing performed this inversion along the axis of [[social class]], whereas the 19th-century American version of John Canoe performed it along the axis of [[Race (classification of human beings)|race]]. Both John Canoe and Wassailing bear strong resemblance to the social inversion rituals that marked the [[ancient Rome|ancient Roman]] celebration of [[Saturnalia]].

"'''John Canoe'''" is also the name of a track recorded by the LeBeha drummers of [[Belize]], who perform traditional [[Garifuna music]].

==Films==
*1984 - ''Caribbean Crucible''. From ''Repercussions: A Celebration of African-American Music'' series, program 6. Directed by Dennis Marks and Geoffrey Haydon.
*1990 - ''Before Reggae Hit the Town''. Directed by Mark Gorney.

==See also==
*[[junkanoo]] festival of the Bahamas
*[[jonkanoo]] festival of Jamaica
*[[Boxing Day]]
*[[Mummers parade]]
*[[Mardis Gras]]
*[[Wren day]]

== Sources ==
* Nissenbaum, Stephen. ''The Battle for Christmas''. New York: Vintage Books, 1997.
*[http://www.black-collegian.com/african/johnkankus1299.shtml Origins of jonkanoo]

== Gallery ==
<gallery>
Image:JunkanooDancerPixelizedFace2006.jpg|Parade Participant in costume during the 2006 Parade
Image:JunkanooCostumeAfterTheParade2006.JPG|Costume Sans Participant After the Parade
Image:JunkanooShoesAfterTheParade2006.jpg|Costume Shoes Sans Participant After the Parade
</gallery>

==External links==
* http://www.junkanoo.com
* http://www.ancestraltravels.com
* http://www.valleyboys.com
* http://www.junkanoobeat.com
* http://www.bahamaslife.com
* http://housser.ca/vr/junkanoo/?id=dawn 360-degree virtual reality panoramic photograph above the street during Nassau's Junkanoo on New Years Day, 2007]

[[Category:Bahamian music]]
[[Category:Parades]]
[[Category:December observances]]
[[Category:January observances]]
[[Category:Winter holidays]]
[[Category:Jamaican styles of music]]
[[Category:Jamaican folklore]]
[[Category:Winter traditions]]

[[da:Junkanoo]]
[[fi:Junkanoo]]

Latest revision as of 22:33, 17 February 2012

Redirect to: