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The Credits | The
Music | Cinematic
Style RONALD DAISE, author of"Reminiscences of Sea
Island Heritage"and Gullah language translator and dialect coach on "Daughters
of the Dust" writes,
Set in the legendary sea islands of the South at the turn of the century, "Daughters of the Dust" follows a Gullah family on the eve of its migration to me North. Led by a remarkable group of African American women, who are carriers of ancient African traditions and beliefs, the extended family readies itself to leave behind friends, loved ones and an entire insulated way of life. Can these women hold fast to their ancient religious beliefs, or will they be swept away into the race toward an era of science and industry? This richly costumed drama, structured in tableaux to mirror the art and icons of its ancient African past, is a testimony to the secret celebrations and packed-away sorrows of African American women. The story unfolds over the course of a family picnic, a last supper. Along the way, the film saturates us with impressionistic colors, African symbolisim, Gullah rituals, cooking, dialect and the sound of field cries, all expressing the complex resonance's of the Gullah lifestyle. The film is structured in the way that an African Griot would recall and recount a family's history. Rather than having a linear structure, the Peazant family's story is recalled and remembered and recollected in a manner that evokes the African American oral tradition. "Daughters of the Dust" focuses on the women of the Peazant family, the carriers of traditions and beliefs that are firmly linked to an African heritage. They are the descendants of African captives who worked the indigo, rice and cotton plantations during slavery. These unique African Americans speak a distinct language called "Gullah" or "Geechee." The women carry in their heads and pockets, scraps of memories--bits and pieces of family memorabilia left by their earlist remembered ancestors. Among those memories are recollections of a group of Ibo (Egbo) captives who, refusing to live in slavery, walked on water to get back to Africa. Most characters in American narrative film are grounded in parameters dictated by the archetypal Greek god and goddesses of classical western literature. The crucial underlying references for the Peazant family in "Daughters of the Dust," are the deities of classical West African cosmologies.
EULA PEAZANT (Alva Rogers) represents the continuation of the Peazant family. Her character adapts well in both the sacred and secular worlds. Eula represents the West African deity, OYA YANSA, the spirit of the winds of change. ELI PEAZANT (Adisa Anderson), is Eula's distraught husband. He is the family blacksmith, the wild man of the woods, he represents the Yoruba diety OGUN, his European equivalent would be the Greek god Pluto. THE UNBORN CHILD, (Kai-Lynn Warren) is the storm raging inside of Eula's womb. She occupies space in the world of the sacred and the secular. She embodies the duality of existence that those of the African dispora have come to understand as the double consciouness (W.E.B. Dubois) The Unborn Child has one foot in this world and one foot in another. She is ESHU ELEGBA, trickster, linguist, Yoruba god, guardian of the crossroads. Her Eroupean equivalent would be Mercury or Hermes. YELLOW MARY PEAZANT, (Barbara-O) represents the African American woman's loss of her self-esteem during slavery and Reconstruction. Yellow Mary is a prostitute, a woman of independent means. Yellow Mary's name is derived from the name of the Yoruba goddess YEMONJA (Mami Wata-Ghana). She is the Mother of the Sea, the Mother of Dreams, the Mother of Secrets and often referred to as the Veiled Isis. Yellow Mary's return home is depicted as a universal rite of transition, she is isolated in an intermediate position in life, on a boat traveling to Ibo Landing. Yellow Mary's European equivalents would be Neptune, Poseidon, Juno or Hera. TRULA, (Trula Hoosier) is Yellow Mary's traveling companion and girlfriend. Yellow Mary and Trula stop by Ibo Landing for the farewell picnic, they plan to continue on to Nova Scotia, Trula's place of birth. Nova Scotia was one of the final destinations on the underground railroad, so Yellow Mary and Trula are taking a fmiliar route. VIOLA PEAZANT, (Cheryl Lynn Bruce) joins Yellow Mary and Trula on the boat to the family picnic at Ibo Landing. Viola is Yellow Mary's first cousin who is a missionary. Viola reflects a syncretism of ancient African beliefs and Christianity. Her character attempts to escape her history and the trauma of her second class citizenship in her Baptist religious beliefs. HAAGAR PEAZANT, (Kaycee Moore) is a self-educated progressive striver who desire to leave behind all that ties her family to their African heritage. Haagar embodies the ethos of the African American urban migration--that primordial push that propels us all to move forward, to seek more for our children, to grow with the winds of change. Her dream is to leave behind an isolated and insulated traditional society for the inclusive bureaucratic impersonality of the modern world is a continualy unfolding drama. Back to Daughters Index | Julie
Dash Filmography | Daughters of the Diaspora All materials Copyright 1998 by Geechee Girls Productions, Inc unless otherwise credited. For more information about Geechee Girls Productions contact Geechee Girl. |