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In ethnological accounts the dance is usually given a place quite unworthy of its social importance. It is often viewed as an independent activity and is described without reference to its contextual setting in native life. Such treatment leaves out many problems as to composition and organization of the dance and hides from view its sociological function.
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- Copyright © International African Institute 1928
References
page 446 note 1 For general accounts of the Azande see , Lagae, Les Azande ou Niam-Niam, 1926Google Scholar , and , Larken, ‘An account of the Zande’ in Sudan Notes and Records, July 1926Google Scholar.
page 447 note 1 My expedition to the Sudan was made possible by the generosity of the Government of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, and by a Government grant from the Royal Society. I also thank the trustees of the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Memorial Fund for additional assistance.
page 448 note 1 For a general account of African Negro music by a specialist see E. M. von Hornbostel on African Negro Music in this Journal, Vol. I, No. i. Accurate work on songs can only be done with the phonograph. I tried, on the river steamer on my way home, to get two musicians with the aid of two musical instruments to set down the notation of songs by Azande singers. The attempt was a failure.
page 449 note 1 E. M. von Hornbostel has drawn attention to the writing of African words to European hymn tunes by missionaries. The result is invariably unsatisfactory. European musical forms, like Arabic, are quite incongruous to an African ear. The Natives always sing the hymns out of tune. It is impossible to translate the words of a hymn into an African language without making a stupid parody of their meaning. Finally, correlated muscular movements which are an essential accompaniment of all African singing are left out of hymn-singing.
page 450 note 1 As the melody is not written I have given the words in their phonetic values in everyday speech not as they are sung.
page 458 note 1 Brown, A. Radcliffe, The Andaman Islanders, 1922.Google Scholar
page 460 note 1 The only exception to this statement is that the dance is held on visits by European officials. Amongst the Azande who have been concentrated by the Government into settlements there is, I believe, a growing tendency for the dance to be held as a play activity without any ritual associations.
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