griot
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɡɹi.oʊ/
Noun
griot (plural griots)
- A West African storyteller who passes on oral traditions; a wandering musician and poet.
- 1995, Françoise Pfaff, Sembene, A Griot of Modern Times, in Michael T. Martin (editor), Cinemas of the Black Diaspora: Diversity, Dependence, and Oppositionality, page 118,
- Griots may be the chroniclers of an important family or of a group of people — like the Bambara hunters’ griot — or itinerant poets and musicians who extol the praises of the person who has hired them for a special festivity.
- 1997, Paul Stoller, Sensuous Scholarship, page 15,
- When ethnographers are asked to read their works to gatherings of Songhay, elders, they, too, are considered griots.
- Ethnographers, however, usually consider themselves scholars, not griots. They prepare themselves for their life's work in a manner altogether different from that of the griot.
- 2003, Melissa Thackway, Interview I: Adama Drabo, director, in Africa Shoots Back: Alternative Perspectives in Sub-Saharan Francophone African Film, page 183,
- I decided that it would be better for a griot to take us back into the legend, rather than me, a contemporary man. Griots have deeply marked me. I already narrated my first film, Ta Dona, in the same way that a griot would have.
- 1995, Françoise Pfaff, Sembene, A Griot of Modern Times, in Michael T. Martin (editor), Cinemas of the Black Diaspora: Diversity, Dependence, and Oppositionality, page 118,
- (cooking) A Haitian dish of fried pork.
Translations
French
Etymology
From Portuguese criado (“servant”).
Noun
griot m (plural griots)
- griot (African storyteller)
- (by extension, derogatory) Someone who tells stories to gullible people.
Synonyms
- (storyteller): barde
Further reading
griot on the French Wikipedia.Wikipedia fr
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