FSU ETD Logo

Title page for ETD etd-07202011-141825


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Kafumbe, Damascus
Author's Email Address dk04c@fsu.edu
URN etd-07202011-141825
Title The Kawuugulu Royal Drums: Musical Regalia, History, and Social Organization among the Baganda People of Uganda
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Music, College of
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Frank Gunderson Committee Chair
Douglass Seaton Committee Member
Joseph Hellweg Committee Member
Michael Uzendoski University Representative
Keywords
  • African Music
  • Social Organization
  • Buganda
  • Social Structure
  • African Literature
  • Uganda
  • African Religion
  • Royal Drums
  • Kinship
  • Kingship
  • African History
Date of Defense 2011-07-08
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
In this dissertation I examine the history and musical culture related to the Kawuugulu royal drums of the Baganda people. I argue that the royal drums and their use articulate principles of social organization through symbolic performances of history, which performers reenact in ways that suit contemporary cultural needs. I analyze historical narratives regarding the royal drums in order to decipher what they reveal about the process of Kawuugulu’s origin, establishment, and historical development. My analysis reveals that this process drew on the two related domains of kinship and kingship, both of which have long served as the backbone of the Baganda’s social organization. Furthermore, I examine how the Kawuugulu royal drums articulate principles of Ganda social organization by acting as symbols and objects of history. To this end, I investigate the cultural importance of drum names and statuses, tuning and maintenance, storage and transportation, performance rules and positions, and a number of historical customs including pairing and dressing drums, placing them on bark cloth, and smearing them with ghee and beer. I also discuss how texts associated with Kawuugulu royal drum bisoko (motifs) articulate principles of Ganda social organization by serving as poetic frameworks for reenacting history. I then look at how Kawuugulu royal performances (via history) articulate consanguinity, a domain whose logic I analyze by focusing on how the consanguinal ties that Butiko Clan members have with some non-Clan members enable the latter to participate in Kawuugulu royal performances. I examine the relationship between consanguinity and the belief that the Kawuugulu royal drum set may exact revenge upon Butiko Clan consanguines who refuse to participate in its performances and upon ineligible non-consanguines of the Clan who do perform. My analysis demonstrates that Butiko Clan consanguinity revolves around a number of principles (including ancestry, history, affinity, and blood brotherhood) and that its multifaceted nature makes it possible for the various clans of Baganda to participate in Kawuugulu royal performances, which in turn foster unity across the kingdom of Buganda.
Files
  Filename       Size       Approximate Download Time (Hours:Minutes:Seconds) 
 
 28.8 Modem   56K Modem   ISDN (64 Kb)   ISDN (128 Kb)   Higher-speed Access 
  Kafumbe_D_Dissertation_2011.pdf 8.11 Mb 00:37:33 00:19:18 00:16:54 00:08:27 00:00:43

Browse All Available ETDs by ( Author | Department )

If you have more questions or technical problems, please Contact the FSU Digital Library Center.