
American Voudou: Journey Into a Hidden World
Author(s): Rod Davis (author) (Author)
- Publisher: University of North Texas Press
- Publication Date: 31 Jan. 1999
- Language: English
- Print length: 392 pages
- ISBN-10: 1574410490
- ISBN-13: 9781574410495
Book Description
Since its violent introduction in the Caribbean islands, it has been the least understood and most feared religion of the New Worldsuppressed, outlawed or ridiculed from Haiti to Hattiesburg. Yet with the exception of Zora Neale Hurston’s accounts more than a half-century ago and a smattering of lurid, often racist paperbacks, studies of this potent West African theology have focused almost exclusively on Haiti, Cuba and the Caribbean basin.
American Voudou turns our gaze back to American shores, principally towards the South, the most important and enduring stronghold of the voudou faith in America and site of its historic yet rarely recounted war with Christianity.This chronicle of Davis’s determined search for the true legacy of voudou in America reveals a spirit-world from New Orleans to Miami which will shatter long-held stereotypes about the religion and its role in our culture. The real-life dramas of the practitioners, true believers and skeptics of the voudou world also offer a radically different entree into a half-hidden, half-mythical South, and by extension into an alternate soul of America. Readers interested in the dynamic relationships between religion and society, and in the choices made by people caught in the flux of conflict, will be heartened by this unique story of survival and even renaissance of what may have been the most persecuted religion in American history.
Traveling on a criss-cross route from New Orleans across the slave-belt states of Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, dipping down to Miami where the voudou of Cuba and the Caribbean is endemic, and up to New York where priests and practioners increase each year, Rod Davis determined to find out what happened to voudou in the United States.
A fascinating and insightful account of a little known and often misunderstood aspect of African-American culture,
American Voudou details the author’s own personal experiences within this system of belief and ritual, along with descriptions and experiences of other people, ranging from those who reject it entirely to ardent practitioners and leaders. Davis also places voudou in a broad context of American cultural history, from slavery to the Civil Rights Movement, and from Elvis to New Age.Current interest in voudou is related, in part, to the arrival of large numbers of people into the United States from the Caribbean, especially Cuba. Blacks in that country were able to maintain the African religion in a syncretic form, known as santeria. The tensions that have arisen between Cubans and African Americans over both the leadership and the belief system of the religion is discussed.
Davis raises questions and offers insight into the nature of religion, American culture, and race relations. The book contains an extensive bibliography for further reading and a glossary of voudou terms for readers unfamiliar with the subject.
Editorial Reviews
From the Author
My purpose in writing this book was to find what had happened to this important African religion brought to America in the course of the slave trade. Because of the systematic repression of voudou, its true nature has been lost or contorted. In the main, it is still largely misunderstood and caricatured. In my book, I recount the ways it has held on, whether in echoes inside Christian worship, such as the Spiritual churches of New Orleans, or in certain kinds of hoodoo practices, which are not really voudou but have connections to the old ways. The recent efforts by African-American spiritual seekers such as the villagers of Oyotunji, in South Carolina, to learn and revive the traditional African practices are encouraging and even though there are sometimes theological conflicts with santeria, which is generally Cuban or Puerto Rican, I find it very heartening to see a religion so unjustly villified bouncing back. My hope is that this book will be at least a step in bringing the legitimacy of voudou back to mainstream public discussion and out of the margins. For those interested in the South, I think this book also offers a view of the region seldom seen. It was for me.
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