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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:The_Ozidi_Saga
rdf:type
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The Ozidi Saga
rdfs:comment
The Ozidi Saga is a choreographed folklore epic performed as part of the oral history of the Ijaw of the Niger River Delta. It is traditionally performed as a periodic festival honoring the folk hero Ozidi. The performance dramatizes key episodes in the myth danced in a nonlinear narrative, allowing a ritual officiant dressed in white and holding objects traditionally identified with the hero to solicit participation by acolytes and members of the audience. A performance in 1966 was filmed and later transcribed and translated by playwright and poet John Pepper Clark.
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dbc:Nigerian_culture dbc:Epic_poems
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3963152
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1036583542
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dbr:Poet dbr:Niger_River dbr:Folklore dbc:Epic_poems dbr:Oral_history dbr:Folk_hero dbr:Ijaw_people dbr:Epic_poetry dbc:Nigerian_culture dbr:Ozidi dbr:Nonlinear_(arts) dbr:John_Pepper_Clark dbr:Playwright
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The Ozidi Saga is a choreographed folklore epic performed as part of the oral history of the Ijaw of the Niger River Delta. It is traditionally performed as a periodic festival honoring the folk hero Ozidi. The performance dramatizes key episodes in the myth danced in a nonlinear narrative, allowing a ritual officiant dressed in white and holding objects traditionally identified with the hero to solicit participation by acolytes and members of the audience. A performance in 1966 was filmed and later transcribed and translated by playwright and poet John Pepper Clark.
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