Thursday, March 22, 2012

Symbolism

I loved our class today on art and symbolism in Ghana. After taking Symbolic Anthropology, I became fascinated by symbols as they are one of the foundational elements of human existence. We literally could not function without symbols - even our words are merely metaphors for our imperceptible mix of thoughts, emotion, and impulse that can never be flawlessly conveyed to the external world. I love symbols like the blatant ones we encounter through art - Katie showed a spiral on the side of a religious structure in Ghana, and told us it represented eternity - like this example, symbols can convey mass meanings full of history and complexity with just one image, that sometimes abstractly relates to whatever it is representing, and is sometimes completely arbitrary, but recognized through tradition.
In my symbolic anthropology class, we discussed the extensive symbolism behind the LDS sacrament ritual. I realized how religions use so much ritualism and symbolism for highly effective purposes. Religion poses intricate theory and inspires feelings and emotions that are hard to put into words and difficult to interpret even when they occur inside of us. Symbols create a route of expression to allow a group to form a cohesive union surrounding such complex beliefs and meanings. No wonder many Mormon kids are so knowledgeable about their religion at such a young age, they are taught the doctrine largely through relatable symbolism that especially helps in conveying religious messages that might usually be thought too mature for children to process.
Like Katie said, this will be a great for us in Ghana. It will be important for me to inquire about the representations and symbolism I see - having even a limited knowledge of what deeper meaning lies behind images, words, or behaviors will allow me to have a better understanding of the culture as a whole. Symbolism in language, actions, art, etc are the very fiber of a society and its cultural makeup.

3 comments:

  1. Natalie posted a really cool picture of symbols on her blog—you should check it out, and we should all print it out and bring it with us to the field and see how many we can find around the villages!

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    1. Oh ya those are Adinka symbols! We learned about those in Twi and had to do a homework assignment on 10 of them, which included looking up what they meant. It was cool! I will definitely want to see if we can find them around.

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  2. These are some great points. Good analysis. You'll have to remember that just like mormon kids, Ghanaians are highly adapted to their realm of thinking and symbolism. They won't immediately feel the need to explain TONS of the symbolism that you'll encounter every day. It comes second-nature to them, just like the symbolism and vocabulary of the gospel comes second-nature to most of us. Always be aware of the existence of deeper meanings and try to uncover them. Remind the Ghanaians that you're new to all of this :)

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