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The Poetics of Relationality: Mobility, Naming, and Sociability in Southeastern Senegal by Nikolas Sweet a Dissertation Submitte
The Poetics of Relationality: Mobility, Naming, and Sociability in Southeastern Senegal By Nikolas Sweet A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Anthropology) in the University of Michigan 2019 Doctoral Committee Professor Judith Irvine, chair Associate Professor Michael Lempert Professor Mike McGovern Professor Barbra Meek Professor Derek Peterson Nikolas Sweet [email protected] ORCID iD: 0000-0002-3957-2888 © 2019 Nikolas Sweet This dissertation is dedicated to Doba and to the people of Taabe. ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The field work conducted for this dissertation was made possible with generous support from the National Science Foundation’s Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant, the Wenner-Gren Foundation’s Dissertation Fieldwork Grant, the National Science Foundation’s Graduate Research Fellowship Program, and the University of Michigan Rackham International Research Award. Many thanks also to the financial support from the following centers and institutes at the University of Michigan: The African Studies Center, the Department of Anthropology, Rackham Graduate School, the Department of Afroamerican and African Studies, the Mellon Institute, and the International Institute. I wish to thank Senegal’s Ministère de l'Education et de la Recherche for authorizing my research in Kédougou. I am deeply grateful to the West African Research Center (WARC) for hosting me as a scholar and providing me a welcoming center in Dakar. I would like to thank Mariane Wade, in particular, for her warmth and support during my intermittent stays in Dakar. This research can be seen as a decades-long interest in West Africa that began in the Peace Corps in 2006-2009. -
The Prophet Muhammad Reincarnated and His Son, Jesus: Re-Centering Islam Among the Layenne of Senegal
Journal of Historical Geography 42 (2013) 24e35 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Journal of Historical Geography journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/jhg The Prophet Muhammad reincarnated and his son, Jesus: re-centering Islam among the Layenne of Senegal John Glover Department of History, University of Redlands, 1200 East Colton Avenue, PO Box 3080, Redlands, CA 92373-0999, USA Abstract This article explores how the Layenne of Senegal have employed the historical geography of the Cap Vert peninsula as an archive to effectively re-center the Islamic world away from Arabia to the coast of West Africa. Annual pilgrimages to Layenne religious sites and shrines that serve as lieux de mémoire provide ‘foyers’ on which contemporary collective and individual identities are contemplated with regard to Layenne perceptions of the past. The Layenne historical imagination is tied to the geographic space that constitutes Cap Vert in a symbiotic relationship by which history gives meaning to place and vice versa. While the rituals practiced at the Layenne places of memory revolve around the hagiography of their founder, Seydina Limamou Laye, who claimed to be the Mahdi and the reincarnation of the Prophet Muhammad, the Layenne have also appropriated sites and symbols associated with French colonization and a post-colonial Senegal into a vibrant and fluid conception of modernity that is simultaneously indigenous and global. Ó 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Islam; Senegal; Layenne; Cap Vert; French West Africa; Sites of memory In 1884, a Lebu fisherman on the Cap Vert peninsula in the French colonial officials, and he was briefly imprisoned by the French in 1887 colony of Senegal announced that he was the long-awaited Mahdi, or due to fears, later proven unfounded, that he was gathering arms for the renewer of Islam that would appear at the end of time, and also an anti-colonial jihad. -
Offshore West Africa – Agc
QUARTERLY REPORT FOR THE PERIOD FROM 1 OCTOBER 2010 TO 31 DECEMBER 2010 HIGHLIGHTS OFFSHORE WEST AFRICA - AGC Drilling of Kora prospect with mean potential of 453mmbbl expected early April 2011; Total un-risked resource potential estimated at approximately 1.7billion barrels of oil equivalent. OFFSHORE WEST AFRICA - SENEGAL Application lodged to enter the second renewal period which includes an exploration well; Agreement signed giving Ophir the right to acquire a 25% stake in the licences; Farmout discussions continuing. OFFSHORE WEST AFRICA - GUINEA BISSAU Data acquisition phase of 3D seismic survey completed; Processing and interpretation in progress; The blocks contain an existing oil discovery with P50 STOOIP of 240mmbbl and several large untested prospects. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Third quarter oil and gas sales of $212,174. CHINA US$6 million of receivables due from the sale of Beibu Gulf interest, subject to conditions precedent being met. CAPITAL RAISING $34million capital raising completed, through a placement and SPP, to fund West African exploration and to pursue growth opportunities. CASH POSITION Cash balance at 31 December 2010 of $38.1m. OFFSHORE WEST AFRICA – AGC AGC PROFOND (FAR 10% paying interest) During the quarter FAR entered into a Heads of Agreement (Agreement) with Ophir Energy plc (Ophir) to participate in the drilling of the Kora prospect via the acquisition of a 10 percent interest in the AGC Profond PSC, in the offshore area jointly administered by Senegal and Guinea Bissau. The Kora well is targeting a prospect with mean prospective oil resources of 453 million barrels (Ophir estimate). The well, which will be drilled by the semi-submersible rig Maersk Deliverer, is currently expected to spud in early April 2011. -
MYSTIC LEADER ©Christian Bobst Village of Keur Ndiaye Lo
SENEGAL MYSTIC LEADER ©Christian Bobst Village of Keur Ndiaye Lo. Disciples of the Baye Fall Dahira of Cheikh Seye Baye perform a religious ceremony, drumming, dancing and singing prayers. While in other countries fundamentalists may prohibit music, it is an integral part of the religious practice in Sufism. Sufism is a form of Islam practiced by the majority of the population of Senegal, where 95% of the country’s inhabitants are Muslim Based on the teachings of religious leader Amadou Bamba, who lived from the mid 19th century to the early 20th, Sufism preaches pacifism and the goal of attaining unity with God According to analysts of international politics, Sufism’s pacifist tradition is a factor that has helped Senegal avoid becoming a theatre of Islamist terror attacks Sufism also teaches tolerance. The role of women is valued, so much so that within a confraternity it is possible for a woman to become a spiritual leader, with the title of Muqaddam Sufism is not without its critics, who in the past have accused the Marabouts of taking advantage of their followers and of mafia-like practices, in addition to being responsible for the backwardness of the Senegalese economy In the courtyard of Cheikh Abdou Karim Mbacké’s palace, many expensive cars are parked. They are said to be gifts of his followers, among whom there are many rich Senegalese businessmen who live abroad. The Marabouts rank among the most influential men in Senegal: their followers see the wealth of thei religious leaders as a proof of their power and of their proximity to God. -
Categorization of Stringed Instruments with Multifractal Detrended Fluctuation Analysis
CATEGORIZATION OF STRINGED INSTRUMENTS WITH MULTIFRACTAL DETRENDED FLUCTUATION ANALYSIS Archi Banerjee*, Shankha Sanyal, Tarit Guhathakurata, Ranjan Sengupta and Dipak Ghosh Sir C.V. Raman Centre for Physics and Music Jadavpur University, Kolkata: 700032 *[email protected] * Corresponding Author ABSTRACT Categorization is crucial for content description in archiving of music signals. On many occasions, human brain fails to classify the instruments properly just by listening to their sounds which is evident from the human response data collected during our experiment. Some previous attempts to categorize several musical instruments using various linear analysis methods required a number of parameters to be determined. In this work, we attempted to categorize a number of string instruments according to their mode of playing using latest-state-of-the-art robust non-linear methods. For this, 30 second sound signals of 26 different string instruments from all over the world were analyzed with the help of non linear multifractal analysis (MFDFA) technique. The spectral width obtained from the MFDFA method gives an estimate of the complexity of the signal. From the variation of spectral width, we observed distinct clustering among the string instruments according to their mode of playing. Also there is an indication that similarity in the structural configuration of the instruments is playing a major role in the clustering of their spectral width. The observations and implications are discussed in detail. Keywords: String Instruments, Categorization, Fractal Analysis, MFDFA, Spectral Width INTRODUCTION Classification is one of the processes involved in audio content description. Audio signals can be classified according to miscellaneous criteria viz. speech, music, sound effects (or noises). -
Probable Starters
UTAH JAZZ (35-30) at MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES (18-46) Game #66 • ROAD Game #34 • FedExForum • MEMPHIS March 9, 2018 • 6 p.m. (MT) • TV: AT&T SportsNet RADIO: 1280 AM/97.5 FM DATE OPP. TIME (MT) RECORD/TV 10/18 DEN W, 106-96 1-0 10/20 @MIN L, 97-100 1-1 LAST GAME’S STARTERS (2017-18 averages) 10/21 OKC W, 96-87 2-1 10/24 @LAC L, 84-102 2-2 • Notched first career double-double (11 points, 10/25 @PHX L, 88-97 2-3 career-high 10 assists) at IND on 3/7 10/28 LAL W, 96-81 3-3 PPG • 10.9 10/30 DAL W, 104-89 4-3 2 • Second in the league in three-point 11/1 POR W, 112-103 (OT) 5-3 RPG • 4.1 percentage (.445) 11/3 TOR L, 100-109 5-4 JOE INGLES • Has eight games this season with 5+ 3FG 11/5 @HOU L, 110-137 5-5 11/7 PHI L, 97-104 5-6 F • 6-8 • 226 • Australia APG • 4.3 • Appeared in his 200th straight game on 2/24 11/10 MIA L, 74-84 5-7 vs. DAL 11/11 BKN W, 114-106 6-7 11/13 MIN L, 98-109 6-8 • Has made a three-pointer in consecutive 11/15 @NYK L, 101-106 6-9 PPG • 12.2 games for just the second time in his career 11/17 @BKN L, 107-118 6-10 15 11/18 @ORL W, 125-85 7-10 RPG • 7.4 • Ranks seventh in Jazz history in blocked shots 11/20 @PHI L, 86-107 7-11 DERRICK FAVORS (641) 11/22 CHI W, 110-80 8-11 Jazz are 11-3 when he records a double- 11/25 MIL W, 121-108 9-11 • APG • 1.3 11/28 DEN W, 106-77 10-11 F • 6-10 • 265 • Georgia Tech double 11/30 @LAC W, 126-107 11-11 st 12/1 NOP W, 114-108 12-11 • Posted his 21 double-double of the season 12/4 WAS W, 116-69 13-11 27 PPG • 13.6 (23 points and 14 rebounds) at IND (3/7) 12/5 @OKC L, 94-100 13-12 • Made a career-high 12 free throws and scored 12/7 HOU L, 101-112 13-13 RPG • 10.5 12/9 @MIL L, 100-117 13-14 RUDY GOBERT a season-high 26 points vs. -
Agricultural Activity Shapes the Communication and Migration Patterns in Senegal S
Agricultural activity shapes the communication and migration patterns in Senegal S. Martin-Gutierrez, J. Borondo, A. J. Morales, J. C. Losada, A. M. Tarquis, and R. M. Benito Citation: Chaos 26, 065305 (2016); doi: 10.1063/1.4952961 View online: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4952961 View Table of Contents: http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/chaos/26/6?ver=pdfcov Published by the AIP Publishing Articles you may be interested in Developing an Energy Policy for the United States Phys. Teach. 52, 552 (2014); 10.1119/1.4902201 Transportation Networks: Dynamics and Simulation AIP Conf. Proc. 622, 251 (2002); 10.1063/1.1487541 Financial time series: A physics perspective AIP Conf. Proc. 519, 667 (2000); 10.1063/1.1291641 Monitoring wetland changes with remote sensing: An East African example AIP Conf. Proc. 387, 215 (1997); 10.1063/1.51993 An assessment of soil productivity loss caused by expanding urban land use using remote sensing and soil productivity models AIP Conf. Proc. 387, 203 (1997); 10.1063/1.51991 Reuse of AIP Publishing content is subject to the terms at: https://publishing.aip.org/authors/rights-and-permissions. Downloaded to IP: 95.122.196.49 On: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 17:35:51 CHAOS 26, 065305 (2016) Agricultural activity shapes the communication and migration patterns in Senegal S. Martin-Gutierrez,1 J. Borondo,1 A. J. Morales,1 J. C. Losada,1 A. M. Tarquis,1,2 and R. M. Benito1 1Grupo de Sistemas Complejos, Escuela Tecnica Superior de Ingenierıa Agronomica, Alimentaria y de Biosistemas, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Avda. -
Submission to the University of Baltimore School of Law‟S Center on Applied Feminism for Its Fourth Annual Feminist Legal Theory Conference
Submission to the University of Baltimore School of Law‟s Center on Applied Feminism for its Fourth Annual Feminist Legal Theory Conference. “Applying Feminism Globally.” Feminism from an African and Matriarchal Culture Perspective How Ancient Africa’s Gender Sensitive Laws and Institutions Can Inform Modern Africa and the World Fatou Kiné CAMARA, PhD Associate Professor of Law, Faculté des Sciences Juridiques et Politiques, Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar, SENEGAL “The German experience should be regarded as a lesson. Initially, after the codification of German law in 1900, academic lectures were still based on a study of private law with reference to Roman law, the Pandectists and Germanic law as the basis for comparison. Since 1918, education in law focused only on national law while the legal-historical and comparative possibilities that were available to adapt the law were largely ignored. Students were unable to critically analyse the law or to resist the German socialist-nationalism system. They had no value system against which their own legal system could be tested.” Du Plessis W. 1 Paper Abstract What explains that in patriarchal societies it is the father who passes on his name to his child while in matriarchal societies the child bears the surname of his mother? The biological reality is the same in both cases: it is the woman who bears the child and gives birth to it. Thus the answer does not lie in biological differences but in cultural ones. So far in feminist literature the analysis relies on a patriarchal background. Not many attempts have been made to consider the way gender has been used in matriarchal societies. -
Mapping the Supply Chain Catering to the Base of The
APPING THE SUPPLY CHAIN CATERING TO M THE BASE OF THE PYRAMID IN SENEGAL FINAL REPORT 12 JULY 2013 Senegal: Mapping the Supply Chain for SLPs Catering to the BOP TABLE OF CONTENTS Acronyms ..........................................................................................................................................1 Executive summary ............................................................................................................................2 Structure of the report ........................................................................................................................ 5 1. Background and context .............................................................................................................6 Lighting Africa Program context ......................................................................................................... 6 Lighting Africa supply chain study: goals and deliverables ................................................................. 6 Country overview and key challenges ................................................................................................ 7 Access to energy: the potential for solar lighting ............................................................................... 8 Policy and regulations ....................................................................................................................... 10 2. Current supply chain for Solar Portable Lanterns (SPLs) ............................................................. -
Le Nation Branding, Pour Une Nouvelle Perception Des Capitales D'afrique
Mémoire de Recherche : Rose-Eliane N’DIAYE Le nation branding, pour une nouvelle perception des capitales d’Afrique de l’Ouest. Étude de Cas : Dakar (Sénégal) et l’implantation du World Trade Center Dakar Université de Bourgogne (Dijon) – Département UFR des langues et communication Master de recherche Communication et Médiation – Promotion 2012-2013 Directeur du mémoire de recherche : Monsieur Alexander Frame Directeur de la formation : Monsieur Pascal LARDELLIER Remerciements Je tiens, dans un premier temps, à remercier Monsieur Pascal Lardellier, Responsable de la Formation, de m’avoir poussée à intégrer sa formation. Mes remerciements s’adressent également à Monsieur Alexander Frame, directeur de mémoire, qui a su me conseiller et m’encourager dans la construction de ce mémoire. J’ai pu travailler et effectuer mes recherches dans un cadre agréable, grâce aux différents échanges que j’ai pu avoir avec les intervenants et camarades de classe, avec une attention particulière pour Alain et Laurent. J’adresse aussi mes remerciements à ma grand-mère, mon oncle et ma meilleure amie pour les encouragements. Rose-Eliane N’diaye Résumé Comme les marques commerciales, les pays ont besoin, plus que jamais, de mettre en place de véritables campagnes de communication pour conquérir de nouveaux investisseurs et susciter dans notre imaginaire des représentations positives. La course aux investisseurs, pour attirer les capitaux sur les territoires, est féroce pour toutes les nations dans notre contexte de crise financière mondiale. Le nation branding est un concept qui permet de répondre en partie à cette problématique, en proposant des outils stratégiques destinés à créer de nouvelles représentations ou renforcer celles existantes. -
Deepening Democracy and Cultural Context in the Republic of Mali, 1992-2002
DEEPENING DEMOCRACY AND CULTURAL CONTEXT IN THE REPUBLIC OF MALI, 1992-2002 by JONATHAN MICHAEL SEARS A thesis submitted to the Department of Political Studies in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Queen's University Kingston, Ontario, Canada September 2007 Copyright © Jonathan Michael Sears, 2007 Abstract This thesis challenges the view that the Republic of Mali is a model of democratization in Africa with the aim of opening the conceptual framework of democratic citizenship inherent in the democratization discourse to greater critical scrutiny. The ‘enthusiastic’ view is held and set forth by various segments of the unity-seeking ruling class (local and foreign, State and NGO) of bringing to Mali a Western-oriented, procedurally minimal democracy, and citizen identity commensurate with international financial institutions’ and donor countries’ vision of democratization as political and economic liberalization. Consequently, this hegemonic project co-opts selected indigenous and Islamic idioms of political and social identity, to reinvent democratization as ‘moral governance.’ Cosmopolitan upper and upper-middle class actors thus apologize for highly personalized politics at the national and local levels, and articulate these more broadly with idioms of recovering rectitude and social cohesion that preserve and reproduce hierarchical social norms. In Malian political culture and in the scholarship of Malian political change, the hegemonic project of citizen identity formation becomes more evident as a construction, as discourses, norms, and practices produced and reproduced by privileged actors. Moreover, the contested character of these constructions becomes evident only as we address the development and deployment of selectively synthesized indigenous, Islamic, and Western-democratic norms, practices, and institutions of citizenship in contemporary Mali. -
Prison Conditions in Cameroon: the Narratives Of
PRISON CONDITIONS IN CAMEROON: THE NARRATIVES OF FEMALE INMATES by HELEN NAMONDO FONTEBO submitted in accordance with the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY in the subject SOCIOLOGY at the UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AFRICA SUPERVISOR: PROFESSOR ME RABE JUNE 2013 SUMMARY PRISON CONDITIONS IN CAMEROON: THE NARRATIVES OF FEMALE INMATES This study explores and critically analyses the lived experiences of female inmates in six selected prisons in Cameroon. The study contributes to the available knowledge regarding prison conditions from the perspectives of female inmates– a subject which has been under researched globally and has received little attention from researchers in Cameroon. The Cameroon Penitentiary Regulation (CPR) professes to be gender neutral and, therefore, it ignores the special needs of female inmates. The central research question is: How do the national policies and laws on prison conditions in Cameroon relate to the lived and narrated experiences of female inmates? The study is informed by two major frameworks, namely, Foucault’s analytical framework from his seminal work Discipline and Punish (1977) and a feminist analytical framework, standpoint feminism, which fills the gap in Foucault’s thesis that is largely devoid of gender analysis. The study is qualitative, using in-depth interviews and observations. It involved a sample of 38 research participants, comprising 18 female inmates, 18 prison staff members and two NGO representatives. The findings reveal that both international and national ratified policies are merely “paperwork”, lacking effective implementation in the prisons selected for this study. There is a general lack of infrastructural facilities in prisons and this prevents classification as suggested by the CPR 1992 and ratified international instruments.