Afbeelding auteur

Voor andere auteurs genaamd David H. Brown, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.

3 Werken 39 Leden 1 Geef een beoordeling

Werken van David H. Brown

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Officiële naam
Brown, David Hilary
Geboortedatum
1957
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
New Jersey, USA
Woonplaatsen
Asbury Park, New Jersey, USA
Opleiding
Yale University (Ph.D.|American Studies|1989)
Beroepen
researcher
teacher
Korte biografie
David H. Brown (1957 - ) is a New Jersey native. He conducted twenty years of fieldwork in Cuba on the religions and arts of African origin, with comparative research in Brazil, Trinidad, and New Orleans. He began the study of the "reglas" of Osha and Ifa in New Jersey with priests, drummers, and babalawos. Having received his Ph.D. in American Studies from Yale University (1989), David taught African Diaspora arts at Emory University and the University of Texas at Austin, 1990-2000. In 1991, David received his "Warriors" and the "Hand of Orula" (Iwori Koso) in Havana from Hermes Valera Otura Sa, and on January 8, 2000, was crowned with Obatala Ayaguna by Zenaida Justiz Odomiguale. David owes a large debt to Mestre Joao Grande, Joao Oliveira dos Santos, of Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, for fifteen years of training and character-building in Capoeira de Angola.

"Santeria Enthroned" took ten years to bring out (1992-2002). T. David Brent, Executive Editor of the University of Chicago Press, now retired, was a constant supporter. With research completed on a second book by 2000, he wrote "The Light Inside": Abakua Arts and Cuban Cultural History" in 2002. David worked closely with three elders of the Eforitongo Efo lodge of Regla, Juan Gutierrez Bosa (Guango), Jesus Varona Puente (Jesus Nasako), and Perico Abasonga, as well as, the Museum of Regla.

Field research for the third book had begun in 1986, a digest of which appeared as a part of Chapter 2 of Santeria Enthroned. David has just completed the manuscript for "Adeshina's Cuba: The Yoruba-Lucumi Priesthoods, 1830-1959," to be published in 2022. A commemoration of Cuba's Lucumi ancestors, it is a history of Babalawos and Orisha Priests and Priestesses that founded and advanced the Religion of the Yoruba on the island. A second new work, "Patakin: Orisha Stories from the Odu of Ifa" is a translation into English of 256 sacred narratives from the Yoruba-Lucumi Ifa divination corpus, a self-published book to appear in Spring 2022.

David was awarded a number of grants and fellowships for his research and writing efforts:

American Academy of Religion's Best Book in the Analytical-Descriptive Category for Santeria Enthroned (2004).

Senior Research Fellow, Rutgers Center for Historical Analysis (RCHA, 1997-98). American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) Post Doctoral Fellowship (1994-95); Smithsonian Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Office of Folklife Programs (1990); Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research (1987).

David ran the internet botanica and bookstore, Folkcuba.com, from 2000 to 2016. Folkcuba.com became AsheExpress, with an expanded bookstore specializing in dozens of translations he has done of notable Cuban treatises of Osha and Ifa. The treatises in English include Ogun, Oshosi, Odde, Osun, Inle, Asojuano, Orisha Oko, Obatala, Oya, Oshun, Yewa, Yemaya, Shango, Agayu, and the Ebo of Ifa. David has his Registered Yoga Teacher (RYT 200) certificate. He lives near the beautiful beaches of Asbury Park with two dogs, Preta and Phoebe.

Leden

Besprekingen

From Nature's Ancient Religion's Building Your Library section:

"David H Brown Santeria Enthroned; University
of Chicago Press; 2003 This may be the most
interesting offering in the category, but it is
certainly not for the novice. Neither is it a nut and
bolts or how to book. This is a wordy sophisticated
read for the scholar and dry; somewhat like reading
a textbook. It is around 400 pages, yet it is double
columned and uses small print. My guess is it is
around 300,000 words. For a comparison, this book
is around 90,000. Santeria Enthroned is typical of a
high brow intellectual publisher like University of
Chicago. 300 of its 400 pages make up the book and
the remaining quarter is appendixes and footnotes or
general notes. Frankly (as is often the case) these
tend to be somewhat intrusive and give it a feel of
more of a research paper than a book one reads for
leisure. Mr. Brown is a PHD, yet from where I do not
know. He was a fellow at Harvard, however whether
he even graduated is left unstated. He is also the
founder and manager of Folklore Cuba a website that
is one of the better and more comprehensive
botanicas. I did write Mr. Brown on two occasions
and received no answer despite the fact I have
purchased from his website before. I do not know if
Mr. Brown is inside our religion and holds some
specific rank and tenure or if he is from the outside
looking in. It is a very strong entry into this
category, but without any communication to verify
any of his credentials the book will have to stand
alone on its merit."
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
cubaking | Nov 15, 2008 |

Prijzen

Statistieken

Werken
3
Leden
39
Populariteit
#376,657
Waardering
3.0
Besprekingen
1
ISBNs
17
Talen
1