Values of Adinkra Symbols

Values of Adinkra Symbols
Title Values of Adinkra Symbols PDF eBook
Author Adolph Hilary Agbo
Publisher Ebony Designs and Publications
Pages 72
Release 1999
Genre Adinkra cloth
ISBN

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Adinkra Alphabet, Fourth Edition

Adinkra Alphabet, Fourth Edition
Title Adinkra Alphabet, Fourth Edition PDF eBook
Author Charles Korankye
Publisher Adinkra Alphabet LLC
Pages 303
Release 2021-05-28
Genre Antiques & Collectibles
ISBN 1947478060

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Learn the deeper meanings of Adinkra symbols and learn to read and write with Adinkra Alphabet

Cloth as Metaphor: (Re)Reading the Adinkra Cloth

Cloth as Metaphor: (Re)Reading the Adinkra Cloth
Title Cloth as Metaphor: (Re)Reading the Adinkra Cloth PDF eBook
Author G. F. Kojo Arthur
Publisher iUniverse
Pages 377
Release 2017-11-30
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 1532028946

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Adinkra symbols visually integrate striking aesthetic power, evocative language, mathematical structures and philosophical concepts. The book views the Adinkra cloth symbols as a writing system. It develops themes from the texts encoded in the proverbs, stories, and maxims associated with the symbols. The themes covered include Akan cosmology, social and political organization, social and ethical values, economics, and Akan knowledge systems. Perhaps the most modern and certainly one of the most comprehensive works on Adinkra (Oluwatoyin Adepoju).

African Symbols

African Symbols
Title African Symbols PDF eBook
Author Heike Owusu
Publisher Sterling Publishing Company
Pages 324
Release 2007
Genre Art
ISBN 9781402746222

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From masks to the symbolic script of the Ashanti, symbols play an important role in all aspects of African life. These sacred items come in a breathtaking array of styles, and here, divided into six areas of cultural similarity, are some of the most beautiful, along with explanations of their meanings. Demons, for most Africans, are responsible for justice and retribution: the superb demon mask shown depicts Kponingo, who belongs to the mythical world of the Senufo in the Ivory Coast. A calabash with the beak of a hornbill, adorned with cowrie shells and made by medicine men, is a typical instrument of witchcraft. Other fascinating symbols include sculptures, cave paintings, status symbols, and art for everyday use.

Adinkra Symbols

Adinkra Symbols
Title Adinkra Symbols PDF eBook
Author Edward Afrifa Manu
Publisher
Pages 108
Release 2021-06-22
Genre
ISBN

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This book contains FIFTY (50) decorated ADINKRA (AFRICAN) SYMBOLS with their names and their meanings for your education and coloring relaxation. As you trace and color these symbols, you also gain skills and confidence in drawing and idea development processes. Symbols were the means of communication in the early stages of man's existence. Some of these symbols are still relevant and useful in our lives today. Some of such symbols have been captured in this book for your fun and education.

The Adinkra Dictionary

The Adinkra Dictionary
Title The Adinkra Dictionary PDF eBook
Author W. Bruce Willis
Publisher
Pages 340
Release 1998
Genre Foreign Language Study
ISBN

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Our Favorite African Adrinkra Symbols

Our Favorite African Adrinkra Symbols
Title Our Favorite African Adrinkra Symbols PDF eBook
Author Abena Walker
Publisher
Pages 39
Release 2019-10-10
Genre
ISBN 9781698860626

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Our Favorite African Adrinkra Symbols is a coloring book with drawings of the Symbols, poems for each of the Seven Principles of the Nguzo Saba, and Learning Activities for children and adults.To Our Children's Parents and Teachers Symbology is a sacred aspect of African culture, spirituality and art, and this is reflected in the traditional African system of educating/parenting. Children grow up learning through the use and understanding of relationships, analogies, harmonies and symbolic imagery and as a result, their creative genius and intuition (an important aspect of African intelligence) are stimulated and developed. At the African Learning Center, we use symbols from the entire African continent, and we have been inspired especially by the Adinkra symbols of Ghana. They are an integral part of our character-building program which helps children relate to each other, and their elders. Adinkra is a type of cloth which was originally woven on narrow looms by the Akan people of Ghana. The word Adinkra means "farewell or good-bye" and traditionally the cloth was worn at funerals in honor of the departed ones and to encourage them on the path of spiritual development. The symbols, which were stamped into the cloth, contained messages which included names of historical events and persons, proverbs, familiar objects and cultural concepts. Today, Adinkra cloth is worn for a variety of special occasions including weddings, birthday celebrations, and naming ceremonies. Our children internalize and utilize the sixty symbols included in the pamphlet, The Language of Adinkra Patterns, by A.K. Quarcoo, 1972. We have chosen seventeen for this coloring book. The literal translations and explanations from the pamphlet are included as well as poems reflecting not only the symbols, but also their relationship to the Nguzo Saba, the Seven Principles of Blackness; Umoja - Unity; Kujiamulia - Self-Determination; Ujima - Collective Work and Responsibility; Ujamaa - Cooperative Economics; Nia - Purpose; Uumbaji - Creativity; and lmani - Faith. The Nguzo Saba was developed by Dr. Maulana Ron Karenga based on his study of African culture and the value system of traditional African society. These principles form the foundation of Kwanzaa, the increasingly popular holiday among Africans in America, which is celebrated from December 26 to January 1. Kwanzaa was started by Dr. Karenga in 1966 and has its roots in the traditional African celebrations of the harvest and the fruits of communal labor. These celebrations were times of thanksgiving and purification; of ritualization, revitalization, and regeneration. The Nguzo Saba and the Adinkra symbols, reflections of the wisdom of our ancestors, give us direction throughout the year. Today, the Adinkra symbols inspire us to be strong and positive. Their wisdom, optimism, faith and love engender within us a deep appreciation of Africa, and the humanity and spiritual depth of African people. Peace and Love, Abena Walker, Director The African Learning Center