Twins in African and Diaspora Cultures

Double Trouble, Twice Blessed

Philip M Peek editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Indiana University Press

Published:18th Jul '11

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Twins in African and Diaspora Cultures cover

The two-sided traditions of multiple births in Africa

In Africa, where the birthrate of twins is among the highest in the world, twins can be seen as a burden to their families and a threat to the social order, or they can be seen as a gift from God and beings with unique abilities who bring about social harmony. Philip M. Peek and the contributors to this illuminating, multidisciplinary volume explore this rich cultural heritage by examining topics such as twins in artistic representation, twins and divination, and twins in performance, cosmology, religion, and popular culture.

The book's sixteen excellent essays are not so much about the lives of actual human twins, a subject that is only briefly discussed in a few chapters, but rather about African ideas concerning twins as they relate to broader conceptions of the cosmos, the social order, and humans' place within it.

* African Arts *

Philip Peek is to be congratulated on marshalling such a diverse range of papers on the topic of twins in ritual practice, belief and the arts. . . . He succeeds entirely in including sufficiently diverse approaches to the topic to annoy and satisfy everyone in equal measure. The broad range of views and wide ethnographic coverage of twins in sub-Saharan and diaspora communities encompassed here makes this an indispensable work for researchers, lecturers and students alike.

* Journal of the Anthropological Society of Oxford *

[T]his book will prove useful to general readers and academics alike, especially those who are interested in religion, cosmology, cultural transfers, sociology, history, and anthropology.

* African Studies Quarter

ISBN: 9780253223074

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 499g

376 pages