Thursday, May 14, 2020

OBJECTS AND IMMORTALS: THE LIFE OF OBI IN IFA-ORIṢHA RELIGION

A dissertation presented
by
Funlayo Easter Wood
to
The Department of African and African American Studies
in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy
in the subject of
African and African American Studies
Harvard University
Cambridge, Massachusetts
April 2017
https://dash.harvard.edu/bitstream/handle/1/41140237/WOOD-DISSERTATION-2017.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

ABSTRACT

The kola nut is a ubiquitous presence in Yoruba culture. Whether being presented by
the basketful to a potential bride's family, shared as a snack amongst friends, or offered to
the spirits, obi—as it is called in Yoruba language—serves at once as food, medicine, and
currency. As an object, obi bridges relational chasms, helping to forge and strengthen bonds
amongst human beings; at the same time, obi is regarded as one of the original immaterial
and immortal divinities in the universe, known in Yoruba as irunmole. It is this bipartite
nature that renders obi a centrifugal force around which much Ifa-Oriṣa practice revolves; so
important are its duties that no ritual can proceed without obi's presence or the presence of a
suitable substitute to stand in its stead.
This dissertation will interrogate the uses and meanings—the “life”—of obi in IfaOriṣa religion. It will examine obi’s physical and spiritual origins, the duties it fulfills while
on earth— including its role as the most frequently used divination medium in Ifa-Oriṣa
practice—and the ways in which it dies or sheds its material body and returns to its
immaterial, immortal form as an irunmole. Through excavation of ritual, material culture
items, sacred narratives, proverbs, divination orature, and personal narratives, the
dissertation will describe and analyze the ways in which characterizations of and
interactions with obi reflect important religio-philosophical perspectives, particularly those
of an ontological, epistemological, ethical, and existential nature. Using obi as a conduit,
and employing theories and methods from within religious studies, comparative religion, 
iv
Africana philosophy, philosophy of religion, theology, anthropology of religion, semiotics,
and philosophy of science, the dissertation will argue for the importance of kinesthetic and
aural ways of knowing in the formation of the Ifa-Oriṣa world-sense. While these ways of
knowing are often subordinated to the visual and oral, I will argue that adequate engagement
with movement and audition are of paramount importance to the understanding of Ifa-Oriṣa
and, by extension, other cosmologically similar African and Diasporic religions. 

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