Kuba Masquerade
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Kuba KUBA (1600 AM) is a radio station based in Marysville, California. which serves the Marysville and Yuba City area, also known as the Yuba–Sutter area. KUBA is simulcast on translator K251CE 98.1 FM. Transmitting power is 5,000 watts day and 2, ...
are responsible for some of the most beautiful and sophisticated
masquerade Masquerade or Masquerades may refer to: Books * ''Masquerade'' (book), a 1979 children's book by Kit Williams that sparked a worldwide treasure hunt * ''Masquerades'' (novel), a 1995 Forgotten Realms novel by Kate Novak and Jeff Grubb * ''Masq ...
or dance traditions in Africa.


''Ngesh'' and masquerade

Origin stories for some
Kuba KUBA (1600 AM) is a radio station based in Marysville, California. which serves the Marysville and Yuba City area, also known as the Yuba–Sutter area. KUBA is simulcast on translator K251CE 98.1 FM. Transmitting power is 5,000 watts day and 2, ...
masking traditions describe how the mask's creators first encountered a '' ngesh'' in the forest and, after a period of disorientation, returns home to carve a likeness of the ''ngesh''. While ''ngesh'' are rarely represented by figurative sculpture, they are thought to be personified in masquerade figures, which are in turn empowered by these nature spirits. The potential for masked performers to become aggressive is a fundamental part of Kuba masquerade, and it is a reflection of the influence of the unpredictable nature of ''ngesh'' on Kuba masked dancers. The association between ngesh and masquerade is also underscored by strict rules that forbid spectators from touching the masks or coming too close to a masked dancer.


''Mukanda'' initiation rites

Kuba initiation rites for boys and young men and associated masquerade figures are related to ''mukanda'' initiation rites, practiced by many peoples residing in the southern savanna of
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from
Angola Angola, officially the Republic of Angola, is a country on the west-Central Africa, central coast of Southern Africa. It is the second-largest Portuguese-speaking world, Portuguese-speaking (Lusophone) country in both total area and List of c ...
, through the
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and into western
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, including Chokwe, Lwena,
Luvale The Luvale people, also spelled Lovale, Balovale, Lubale, as well as Lwena or Luena in Angola, are a Bantu ethnic group found in northwestern Zambia and southeastern Angola. They are closely related to the Lunda and Ndembu to the northeast, but t ...
, Lwembe, Chesterfield, Mbunda, Mbwela,
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, Suku, Pende, and southern Lunda. There are two forms of initiation that occur in the Kuba region. One form, called ''babande'', is practiced in many Ngeende, Ngongo, Mbeengi, Bokila, Shoowa and Bushoong villages in the central and northern Kuba region. Babanede initiation rites take place within the village proper, and sometimes within the walled compound of the village chief. By contrast, southern initiation practices must take place outside the community in a secret forest location. Southern Kuba initiation rites are called in Northern Kete villages and in Southern Bushoong villages. Both of these words translate to "secret," underscoring the unseen dimension of the rite.


Royal masquerade

Initiation rituals at the Kuba capital of Nshern were suspended during the late nineteenth century and were not reinstated. Due in part to the absence of these rituals, discussions of Kuba masking traditions at Nsheng has centered on three masking traditions described as royal: , ''Bwoom'' and . These are interpreted as representing the king, the commoner and the wife of , respectively.


Kuba masks

There are more than twenty different types of masks that function within the men's initiation society. is one of the three most important and represents Woot, the founding hero from whom the Kuba believe themselves to be descended. masks are worn by the nyimi, or king, of the Kuba or by chiefs in villages. The nyimi's mask is usually made of leopard skin, while those of chiefs are made of antelope skin. One of the principal Kuba dance masks is called . The chief identifying characteristic is the shape of the eyes, whose centers are cones surrounded by holes through which the wearer sees. Like many Kuba types of masks, is extensively polychromed, or multicolored.


References

{{Reflist masquerade, Kuba Masquerade ceremonies in Africa