In Step with the Times: Mapiko Masquerades of Mozambique

Rebecca Gearhart
Kronos  
Paolo Israel, In Step with the Times: Mapiko Masquerades of Mozambique (Athens OH: Ohio University Press, 2014), 329 pp, paperback, ISBN 978-0-8214-2088-1. In Step with the Times is an ethnographically rich historical examination of the famous Makonde masked dance called mapiko. In each exceptionally wellresearched, -organised, and -written section of the book, Paolo Israel uncovers the layers of meaning invested in mapiko by a wide range of human actors (missionaries, colonial officials,
more » ... rs, revolutionaries, artists and peasants) and masked characters (Ngoni fisherman, Masai quack, hungry Makua, wild animal, lazy soldier, disgruntled youth), whose perspectives describe the history of the Makonde people from the early twentieth to the early twenty-first century. The mapiko dance field is where the Makonde have performed their values, gender roles, religious beliefs, political ideologies, artistic talents and sense of tradition and modernity. By studying various genres of mapiko at different points in time, Israel is able to discern shifts in each of these aspects of Makonde life and understand how slavery, colonial conquest, cosmopolitanism, capitalism, socialist revolution, civil war, democracy and generational divisions have shaped Makonde society. Israel casts a wide net for theoretical inspiration, but Gregory Bateson's schismogenesis is the big catch. Israel uses the concept to understand the critical role that competitive rivalry has played in differentiating the Makonde from their neighbours and more importantly in acting as the 'engine of creativity' that thrust new mapiko genres into being. For example, Israel describes a rupture that occurred in the 1930s, when the Makonde converted the lineage-based organisational structure of mapiko to a patron-based, talent-rich, innovation-inspired principle known as 'meat is meat' (58). This change pivoted around a master named Nampyopyo, who resurrected an older genre of character masks known as mileya, which he populated with masks he carved himself. Israel explains how the renowned artistic giant captured the physical attributes, mannerisms and habits of locals and foreigners while maintaining a strict code of secrecy that made the new masks even more powerful and dangerous than their predecessors (86). Israel introduces readers to a host of Makonde artists such as Nampyopyo, who come to personify each mapiko genre and bring it to life. Historians will admire Israel's careful use of historical text, oral history and song text within a critique of historicisation and with an acute awareness of the ephemerality of performance. Scholars of performance studies will appreciate Israel's theoretical analysis of the elements of secrecy and mimesis found in mapiko, as well as how he integrates first-person narratives by mapiko masters and dancers. For example, Israel meticulously studies the vocabulary masters use to focus on the four components of mapiko (call song, mask, dance, and narrative performance), and their aesthetic qualities. And he demonstrates how transformation of mapiko is captured in the Shimakonde vernacular by providing a litany of examples:
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