Ceylon African Manja Performance: Enactments of Black Ways of Being and Knowing in Sri Lanka
Ceylon African Manja Performance: Enactments of Black Ways of Being and Knowing in Sri Lanka
Ceylon Africans are an Afrodiasporic community in Sri Lanka and are the descendants of enslaved Africans brought to the island from the 16th-20th centuries. This article focuses on the deployment of Ceylon African manja performances as an embodiment of memory and Afrodiasporic identity both in private and public spheres. I argue that Ceylon African manja performances extend beyond an expression of identity and functions as an Africana aesthetic praxis that facilitates memory-keeping work among African-descended peoples in South Asia. Combining theories of Africana aesthetics, memory, and performance with ethnography, I illustrate how manja performance is a catalyst for individual and communal African identity. This study reveals how manja performances are not merely limited to enactments of unique cultural practices for the education or admiration of an audience but also about acknowledging the significance of memory, remembering, and re-membering to their life worlds, Africanity, and futurity.
CITATION: Jayawardene, Sureshi M.. Ceylon African Manja Performance: Enactments of Black Ways of Being and Knowing in Sri Lanka . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2020. African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Volume 13, Number 3, 2020, PP. 256-268 - Available at: https://library.au.int/ceylon-african-manja-performance-enactments-black-ways-being-and-knowing-sri-lanka