The osun osogbo festival: its functions and aesthetics
Table Of Contents
Chapter ONE
INTRODUCTION
- 1.1Introduction
- 1.2Background of Study
- 1.3Problem Statement
- 1.4Objective of Study
- 1.5Limitation of Study
- 1.6Scope of Study
- 1.7Significance of Study
- 1.8Structure of the Research
- 1.9Definition of Terms
Chapter TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
- 2.1Historical Overview
- 2.2Cultural Significance
- 2.3Rituals and Traditions
- 2.4Symbolism in the Festival
- 2.5Impact on the Community
- 2.6Evolution of the Festival
- 2.7Comparative Studies
- 2.8Socio-economic Aspects
- 2.9Psychological Perspectives
- 2.10Global Influence
Chapter THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
- 3.1Research Design
- 3.2Data Collection Methods
- 3.3Sampling Techniques
- 3.4Data Analysis Procedures
- 3.5Ethical Considerations
- 3.6Research Validity
- 3.7Research Reliability
- 3.8Limitations of Methodology
Chapter FOUR
DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS
- 4.1Overview of Findings
- 4.2Demographic Analysis
- 4.3Cultural Insights
- 4.4Economic Implications
- 4.5Social Perspectives
- 4.6Environmental Impact
- 4.7Community Perceptions
- 4.8Recommendations for Improvement
Chapter FIVE
SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- 5.1Conclusion and Summary
- 5.2Recap of Findings
- 5.3Contributions to Knowledge
- 5.4Implications for Future Research
- 5.5Practical Applications
Project Abstract
The Osun Osogbo festival is a significant cultural event celebrated annually in Osogbo, Nigeria, in honor of the river goddess Osun. This research project aims to explore the functions and aesthetics of the festival, shedding light on its cultural importance and artistic expressions. The festival serves multiple functions within the community, acting as a religious, social, and economic event. As a religious festival, it is a time for the devotees of Osun to come together and pay homage to the river goddess, seeking her blessings for fertility, prosperity, and protection. The festival also serves as a social event, bringing together people from different backgrounds to celebrate their shared cultural heritage. Additionally, the festival has economic implications, as it attracts tourists and generates income for the local community through the sale of crafts, food, and other goods. Aesthetically, the Osun Osogbo festival is a vibrant display of traditional African art forms, including music, dance, and visual arts. The festival features performances by traditional drummers, dancers, and singers, creating a lively and colorful atmosphere. The visual arts are also a key component of the festival, with elaborate costumes, masks, and sculptures used to honor Osun and depict scenes from Yoruba mythology. One of the most visually striking aspects of the festival is the sacred grove of Osun, a UNESCO World Heritage site that serves as the focal point of the celebrations. The grove is home to a variety of sculptures and shrines dedicated to Osun and other Yoruba deities, creating a sacred space for worship and reflection during the festival. Overall, the Osun Osogbo festival is a complex cultural event that serves multiple functions and showcases a rich array of artistic expressions. By exploring the functions and aesthetics of the festival, this research project aims to deepen our understanding of the cultural significance of the event and its impact on the community of Osogbo.
Project Overview
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</p><p><strong>1.1 Introduction</strong></p><p> Festival is an event usually set by a local community. It centres on and some unique Aspects of that community. It is a set of activities and practice designed to entertain the People of that particular community.</p><p> Among many religions, a ‘feast’ is a set celebration in honour of God or gods. A Feast and a festival is historically inter-related. Festival of many types serves to meet specific Needs as well as to provide entertainment. These types of celebration offer a belonging to Religious, social or geographical groups. Festivals also reminds people of their traditions and in resents times also helps in unity among family.</p><p> There are numerous types of festival in the world, though many have religious origin, Others have some cultural significance. Also, certain people celebrate their own festival to mark some significance occasion in their history.</p><p> </p><p> Festival is also a set of activities and practice designed to educate and to entertain the People of a particular community through ritual performance, celebrations or social activities.</p><p> Ekpeyong (1981:31) opines that</p><p>Festivals are periodic re-occurring days or seasons of merry-making sets aside by a community, tribe, clan, for the observance of sacred celebration, religious, solemnities Or musical and traditional performance of social significance.</p><p>It is an occasion of public manifestation of joy. It can take the form of the form of religious celebration during which sacrifices are offered to the different gods having power over rain, sunshine, marriage, thunder, and good harvest.</p><p>Among the Yoruba, the indigenous religious have largely given way to Christianity and Islam, but the old festival still observed. Nigeria has many local festivals that date back before the arrival of major religion and which are still occasion for masquerades and dance.</p><p>Festivals in Yoruba land i.e. African society is a means of worshipping different gods which</p><p>Have significance and different roles. Sango, which is the god of thunder, Ogun the god of Iron and Osun, the god of water. These gods have roles they play in the African society. Orisha is a spirit or deity that reflects one of the manifestations of Olodumare (God) in the Yoruba spirit or religious system.</p><p>The Yorubas believe in Orisha, and their theogany enjoys a pantheon of orishas, these includes Aganju,</p><p> Obaluaye, Erinle, Eshu, Yemojs, Obatala, Oshumare, Ogun, Orunmila, Oshun, Oya, Sango and many countless other Orishas. The Yorubas also generates their ancestral spirits through Egungun, masquerades, Oro, Irunmole, Gelede, and Ibeji the orisha of twins which in no wonder since the Yorubas are officially known to have world’s highest rates of twin birth of any group.</p><p> Obatala is the father of human kind, divinity of light, spiritual purity and moral uprightness, Eshu is the messenger between the human and divine worlds under god of divinity.Eshu is recognised as a trickster and is childlike. Osumare is a rainbow deity, divinity of movement and activity, guardian of children and associated with the umbilical cord, Sango a god of thunder, warrior deity, fire, skyfather, represents male power and sexuality. Ogun is a warrior Deity, divinity of iron, war, labour, sacrifices, and technology e.g. railroads. Osun is divinity of rivers, love, feminine beauty, fertility and also one of Sangos lover and beloved of Ogun. These Orishas plays significant roles in the African society and the Yoruba’s belief in these Orishas.</p><p><strong>1.1 </strong><strong>THE CONCEPT OF AESTHETICS IN THE OSUN OSOGBO FESTIVAL.</strong></p><p>Herbert Zettl (1973) defines!</p><p> Aesthetics as a study of sense of perception and how these</p><p> Perceptions can be most effectively clarified, intensified,</p><p> Interpreted through a medium for specific recipients.</p><p>Aesthetics may be defined as the philosophical study of beauty and taste. It comprises of what is good and bad in any work of art.</p><p>It deals with nature and value of arts as well as those responses to natural objects that find expression in the language of the beautiful and ugly.</p><p> The word “aesthetics” was given by a German philosopher Alexander Baumnger in 1750, which he derived from the Greek word “Aesthetics” meaning “perception.” From here the adjective “Aesthetics” which means that which pertains to the sense of perception is formed. He gave the name aesthetics to what earlier philosopher called theory of beauty or the philosophy of taste.</p><p> The encyclopaedia Britannica 1 (p.115) has it that</p><p>Aesthetics is the study of beauty and to a lesser extents of it opposite, the ugly. It has often been defined as the science of the beautiful suggesting an organised body of knowledge of a special subjects matter. Its is usually concerned with the theoretical study of the beauty in work of arts, with effort to understand and explain them.</p><p>According to Hamlyn encyclopaedic dictionary</p><p>Aesthetics is recognised as a science in philosophy and it stand for That which deduces from nature and taste the rules and principles, The science of the beautiful.</p><p>Akpan and etuk (1990) defines</p><p> Aesthetics as the science or study of beauty.</p><p>Aesthetics, according to my own view is the perception of beauty. It is the appreciation of the beauty as well as the ugly in all parts of life including the arts. It comprises of what is good a and bad in any work of arts. The aesthetics in the Osun Osogbo festival includes: Drums, Dance, Music’s, Costumes, Languages, Audience and so on</p><p>These makes the festival more appreciated by the people and more colourful. The festival immense benefits to the tourist sector of Nigeria economy. The enables the community to sell its culture to tourist among others coming from within and all outside the country.</p><p> The Osun grove has been lifted as a world heritage site by UNESCO to accept Osun grove into the lists of cultural and natural properties which is going to be a great source of foreign revenue to the Nigeria government.</p><p> All these have inspire me in studying the Osun Osogbo festival and because the festival has immense societal benefits which include improved environmental sanitation, as every where is kept clean during the period of the festival as Osun is generally reffered to as god of purity.</p><p> Osun Osogbo festival also remains the strongest unifying factor in Osogbo land, irrespective of the different social, economic, and religious, political conviction of the people as they all comes together annually to celebrates.</p><p><strong>1.2 </strong><strong> PURPOSE OF STUDY.</strong></p><p>Osun Osogbo festival is the most important and significant components culture of Osogbo. The major purpose of this study us to analyse the aesthetics and functions in the Osun Osogbo festival and to look at the way the people of osogbo have been celebrating these festival in the past years and recent years, to look at the difference between the past years and recents celebrations. These work will also look at the way the people of Osogbo react to this festival despites the numerous of Africans that identify themselves as either Christianity or Islam, and ancients beliefs still have its plaxe in their lives. It will also look at the roles these festival performs among the people of osogbo.</p><p><strong>1.3 </strong><strong> SCOPE OF STUDY.</strong></p><p>This work is on the Osun Osogbo festival and it will limit itselt to bringing out the aesthetics, functions and importance of the Osun Osogbo festival in terms of its performances. These work begins with the history of the Osun Osogbo festival with the way the festival is being performed from the day one to the twelveth day which is the end of the festival, and the findings about the festival.</p><p><strong>1.4 </strong><strong> METHODOLOGY.</strong></p><p>The research methodology of this work is based on analysis of data and interviews which are gathered and showing relevant places of pictures taken during the festival of relevant places and people.</p><p>The data gathered and analysed which includes different people, both men and woman, old and young, who come for the festival and participates in the Osun festival whole heartedly.</p><p><strong>1.5 </strong><strong> JUSTIFICATION.</strong></p><p>The purpose of this study is to justify the assertion that indeed, the Osun Osogbo festival is full of aesthetics elements of dance, drums, musics, costumes, and so on, this study is to correct the image created by some Eurocentric scholars and Europeans that Africa has either history nor culture. The Eurocentric scholars belief that European culture is superior to African culture, and that African literature is primitive and as such noting can come out of African oral literature.</p>
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