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Hand Carved African Sande society Wood Mask (1095)

$ 95.83

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Refund will be given as: Money back or replacement (buyer's choice)
  • Culture: African
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 60 Days
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Congo
  • Condition: Hand made - May contain time damage and small cracks.

    Description

    AFRICAN MASK
    COLLECTION CENTER
    Hand Carved African Sande society Wood Mask
    Hand Carved African Wood Sande society Wood Mask
    Sande, also known as zadεgi, bundu, bundo and bondo, is a women's initiation society in Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea and the Ivory Coast. The Sande society initiates girls into adulthood by rituals including female circumcision. [1] It is alleged by its supporters to confer fertility, to instill notions of morality and proper sexual behavior, and to maintain an interest in the well-being of its members throughout their lives.
    In addition, Sande champions women's social and political interests and promotes their solidarity vis-a-vis the Poro, a complementary institution for men. The Sande society masquerade is a rare and perhaps unique African example of a wooden face mask controlled exclusively by women - a feature that highlights the extraordinary social position of women in this geographical region.
    The Sande society is found throughout the Central West Atlantic Region, an ethnically plural and linguistically diverse region that lies within the littoral forest zone bounded by the Scarcies River and Cape Palmas. [3] As early as 1668, a Dutch geographer named Olfert Dapper published a description of the "Sandy" society as it existed in the Cape Mount region of Liberia, based on a first-hand account that seems to date from 1628. [4] [5 ]
    Anthropologists believe that Sande originated in Gola society and spread to the neighboring Mende and Vai; other ethnic groups adopted Sande as recently as the present century. Today this social institution is found among the Bassa, Gola, Kissi, Kpelle, Loma, Mano and Vai of Liberia; the Kono, Limba, Mende, Sherbro, Temne and Yalunka of Sierra Leone; and in the northern and eastern extension of these ethnic groups in Guinea.
    Although anthropologists and art historians sometimes describe the Sande society as an all-embracing, pan-ethnic association, there is considerable cultural variation throughout the region. [6] [7] The ethnic groups where the Sande Society is present speak languages ​​belonging to three language families (Mande, Mel and Kru). They may be animists, or like the Mende, Vai and Yalunka, they may have significant Muslim populations.
    In some societies, such as the Bassa, Kissi and Kono, the complementary men's society, the Poro, may not be present. Among the Dei and Loma, the Sande society regularly admits male blacksmiths as ritual specialists, and in Gola society, the spirit represented by the mask is considered to be male rather than female. Indeed, the quintessential symbol of Sande among many of the ethnic groups where this woman's association is present - the wooden helmet mask - is entirely absent among the Kpelle, Kono, Loma and Mano.
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    height-80 CM
    width-50 CM
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