Baouule People Research Paper

Decent Essays
The Baoule people had their own type of entertainment. They would do masquerades to entertain themselves. Technically, masquerades are performance's of people disguised to pretend to be someone they are not. They had two different types of entertainment masks, Mblo and Goli. They were both similar but had different purposes by how they performed it. However, these performances are no longer the same. Over the years, they changed and improved for the better.

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Angoon On October 26th, 1882 Angoon Alaska was shelled and burned by the US Navy after a dispute and alleged hostage situation. The Shaman of the Tlingit tribe was taken on a whale boat where a harpoon gun exploded, killing the medicine man of the tribe. The tribe mourned for 4 days after they received the news, they did nothing. After the monstrosity, the tribe only asked for 200 blankets and an apology from the US Navy, what they received was $90,000 from Congress.…

    • 1652 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Long ago in the Dreamtime here were two tribes. They had been battling for many years and were fighting over the fertile lands next to the water where the food was good. As the lands in the west became bare both tribes went looking for food. They both arrived in what is now Illawarra. The Oodgeroo Tribe claimed that it was their land while the Noonuccal tribe said that they were there first.…

    • 160 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    I can not purely identify with the situation of the Lee's but can sure understand the perspective. To my understand the Lee's were ousted from having any input into the care of their daughter Lia. To me, it seems the doctors were using Lia to experiment with all different type of medications to see what would work and disregarded all the possible side effect the could arise. Lia's parent was against all the heavy medicating, but all the doctor wanted to do was keep giving her medications. The Hmong culture was not completely against biomedicine, but rather feared the negative impact it has on the human body.…

    • 147 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In May of 1804 Meriwether Lewis invited me on a expedition with William Clark with 59 other people, we set sailed on the Missouri River. When we recline on the Missouri River. Lewis stopped on a couple stops to put stuff in his journal. September 5th, 1804 we spotted a deer with black tales cliffs upstream from the mouth of the Niobrara River in northeast Nebraska. On July 9th,1806 in Montana near Sun River we stopped and a plant with a blueish petals on it and Lewis wrote in his journal about the flower.…

    • 439 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    continue to keep growing through the amount of non local people who share the same Cajun Créole culture that come in from outside areas to attend the festival, the surrounding events and festivals that lead up to the big festival itself, and the show casing of local food, music, and arts and crafts that all come together to celebrate the Cajun Créole culture. Two busloads of what we would consider “tourists” were dropped off at the festival grounds each day to participate in the festival however this particular time was right around the time the French Mass was beginning on the Sunday of the festival. A news report stated that anywhere from 100,00 to 150,00 visitors came to attend the festival (Wartelle). The city of Lafayette may have been foreign to these particular people but while they were on festival grounds they were in fact not “tourists” because even though they are from a different…

    • 553 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Culture of the Choctaw Indians The culture of the Choctaw Indians evolved across the centuries merging European-American influences, although relations with France, Spain, and England significantly influenced it as well. They were well known for their rapid modernization, developing a written language, changing to yeoman agricultural methods, and the lifestyles of European-American and African-Americans imposed on their way of life and their culture. The Choctaw society has its roots embedded in the Mississippian mound-building era. The early religion of the Choctaw consisted of a belief in a good spirit and an evil spirit.…

    • 572 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Two cultures one goal. The culture of the American healthcare delivery system is more western, medical and scientific while the Hmong family is more old, traditional, and tales. While the American healthcare believes in medication, medical exam and lab tests, the Hmong family, on the other hand, believe in the herb, ceremonial sacrifices, and shamans. Both cultures clashes in numerous ways but the significant one was the choice of treatment for lia. The Hmong family believed in their traditions ways such sacrificing animals to the gods, and using herbs, as a choice of treatment for their daughter’s condition.…

    • 598 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Chinook Research Paper

    • 1993 Words
    • 8 Pages

    Over the last few decades, populations of Chinook – or King – Salmon have dropped to all time lows in Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula. Three years ago the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADFG) significantly tightened their restrictions on King Salmon fishing in general and particularly a type of fishing called setnetting (where fishermen employ large nets to catch massive quantities of fish). Since then the King Salmon numbers have been slowly rising to 24,000 fish last season and projections for this year hover around 30,000 Kings expected. The article from the Alaska Journal of Commerce entitled “Larger Expected King Run Loosens Restrictions on Setnets, Drifters” reports that due to these recently optimistic projections, the ADFG will allow…

    • 1993 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Essay On Hmong Culture

    • 2194 Words
    • 9 Pages

    The cultural clashes amongst the people of the Hmong and Westered based society of America about health care is a clash of ideologies and ethnocentrism. A refusal to find middle ground and a general misunderstanding of each other’s cultures. Each of these culture’s healing arts, be that biomedicine of America or the traditional healings of the Hmong, are working remedies that tackle the problems faced by healers and doctors with a unique understanding of one’s culture. Through the Hmong it is a spiritual and a truly holistic understanding of the body, while the American biomedicine divides things into parts, like a car. These two systems while approaching the same field with different understandings, can have similar results.…

    • 2194 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    After living among the Cherokee in North Georgia as a missionary, I have discovered that the Indian peoples are quite useful. They are all civilized in their own way and know how to work hard for the things that they receive. Their work and harvest skills are impeccable and would be an excellent asset to any community. Although many of the white settlers coming to Georgia wish to dispose of the Indians, it would ultimately be more beneficial for them to stay. The Indians should be able to stay and I am willing to do anything to make this a possibility.…

    • 599 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Cherokee Tribe of today is made of 3 different groups that all descend from the same common tribe which was formed in the late 1800s. The Cherokee community has more than 300,000 tribal members, making it the largest of the 567 federally recognized tribes in the United States. Upwards of 800,000 people claim having Cherokee ancestry on US land. With Oklahoma being the largest census of acclaimed Cherokee tribe members, members reside within 14 counties of that state. The Tribes economic impact within Oklahoma and neighboring northeastern states, is at an estimated $1.5 billion.…

    • 500 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Essay On The Hmong

    • 910 Words
    • 4 Pages

    History of the Hmong The Hmongs are a group of people that originated from Southern China and migrated to different parts of Southeastern Asia, including Laos, Thailand, Burma, and Vietnam. Many of the men were recruited and trained by the CIA during the Vietnam War to help prevent the North Vietnamese to invade Laos and South Vietnam through the Ho Chi Min Trail (Cobbs, 2010). After the war, Laos fell to the communist party in 1975 and the Hmong were targeted for annihilation by the new communist regime in Laos (Gordon, 2016).…

    • 910 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Essay About Hmong Culture

    • 778 Words
    • 4 Pages

    CHAPTER THREE METHODOLOGY Introduction Asian students in the United States are categorized by aggregated data as a model minority who have the abilities to attain high educational attainment and achievement without special assistance (Ngo & Lee, 2007). While data has indicated that high education attainment in the United States is associated with higher earnings, researchers have argued that with further examination, aggregating data on Asian often conceals the differences in attainment and achievement among all Asian groups (Crissey, 2009; Ngo & Lee, 2007; Reeves & Bennett, 2004). With disaggregating the data, some Southeast Asian ethnic groups, such as the Hmong have lower educational attainment and achievement rates compared to Chinese and Japanese. The lower rates are due to their recent immigration to the United States (Ngo & Lee, 2007; Reeves & Bennett, 2004).…

    • 778 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Hmong Culture Analysis

    • 1122 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The Hmong people have endured the persecution and killing of their people. They have experienced the oppression and hardships involved in immigrating to a new country with new customs and new values. It is not a surprise that the Hmong culture is gradually decreasing as time goes by (Nursing 220, 2016). The younger generations growing up in America are not as inclined to learn about the old customs (The Split Horn, 2001). It the future, there will not be many people left to teach the young Hmong people their traditions and about their history in Laos.…

    • 1122 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The European settlers of North America irreversibly changed the way Native Americans lived. These settlers brought different ideologies, convictions, religion and diseases, to the Indigenous peoples. There were frequent clashes between the settlers and the Natives over land rights and usage, religious and cultural differences, and, especially, broken treaties (Calloway 3). Some tribes embraced the new ideas and began to incorporate them into their own culture, while other tribes rejected them entirely (Calloway 4). It is not possible to understand the history of the United States without acknowledging the “very long history, cultural diversity, and enduring presence of America’s indigenous peoples (Calloway iii).…

    • 2163 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Superior Essays