Louisiana Voodoo
Louisiana Voodoo (French: Vaudou louisianais, Spanish: Vudú de Luisiana, Louisiana Creole: Voudou Lalwizyàn), also known as New Orleans Voodoo, is an African diasporic religion and magic tradition that originated in Louisiana. It arose through a process of syncretism between the traditional religions of West Africa, the Roman Catholic form of Christianity, and Haitian Vodou. No central authority is in control of Louisiana Voodoo, which is organized through autonomous groups.
Historical records reveal the names of various deities who were worshiped in Voodoo. Prominent among them were Blanc Dani, the Grand Zombi, and Papa Lébat. These were venerated at altars, where sacrifices were made to them. Spirits of the dead also played a prominent role in historical Voodoo, with some contemporary practitioners regarding the religion as a form of ancestor worship. Historical accounts suggest that in the 19th century, the saints played a prominent role, although amid the 20th-century revival, the veneration of deities from other African diasporic religions became common. The production of charms, which are known as gris-gris, plays an important part.
From the early 18th century, enslaved West Africans—the majority of them Bambara and Kongo—were brought to the French colony of Louisiana. There, their traditional religions would have syncretized with the Roman Catholic beliefs of the French. This continued as Louisiana came under Spanish control and was then purchased by the United States in 1803. In the early 19th century, many migrants fleeing the Haitian Revolution arrived in Louisiana, bringing with them Haitian Vodou, which contributed to the formation of Louisiana Voodoo. Although the religion was never banned, its practice was restricted through a range of laws regulating when and where black people could gather. Practiced secretly, it spread up the Mississippi River to Missouri. During the 19th century, practitioners such as Marie Laveau, attracted considerable attention. By the early 20th century, the public practice of Voodoo had heavily declined. After the 1960s, the New Orleans tourist industry increasingly used references to Voodoo to attract visitors, while a Voodoo revival took place, the practitioners of which often drew heavily on other African diasporic religions such as Haitian Vodou and Cuban Santería.
Although originating among African diasporic communities in New Orleans, Louisiana Voodoo has included white participants since at least the 19th century, and some contemporary Voodoo groups have a majority-white membership. The religion has long faced opposition from non-practitioners, who have characterized it as witchcraft and devil-worship, and many sensationalist portrayals of the religion have featured in popular culture.
Definitions
[edit]Louisiana Voodoo was a religion,[1] one more specifically characterized as an African American religion[2] or a creole religion.[3] Louisiana Voodoo has also been referred to as New Orleans Voodoo,[4] and—in some older texts—Voodooism.[5] The scholar Ina J. Fandrich described it as the "Afro-Creole counterculture religion of southern Louisiana".[6] It was influenced heavily by the traditional African religions brought to the region, predominantly from West Central Africa and Senegambia, before later also being influenced by the Haitian Vodou.[7]
The religion emerged along the Mississippi River valley, and especially in the city of New Orleans, in the 18th and early 19th century before fading out in the early 20th century.[8] The historical record for Voodoo is fragmentary,[9] with much knowledge of the religion being lost and not recoverable.[10] In the late 20th century there was a revival of Louisiana Voodoo, creating a tradition that "more closely resembles" Haitian Vodou and Cuban Santería than the 19th-century Louisiana Voodoo that is described in historical accounts.[11] Some 21st-century practitioners have also sought instruction from West African traditions, for instance, being initiated into West African Vodun.[12]
Although the spelling Voodoo is now the most popular term for this tradition,[13] variant spellings have been used over the years;[14] alternatives have included Voudou and Vaudou.[15] The spelling Voodoo is sometimes used for the Louisiana practice to distinguish it from Haitian Vodou.[16] In some sources, practitioners are referred to as Voodoos themselves,[17] and elsewhere as Voodooists.[18] A related term is hoodoo, which may originally have been largely synonymous with Voodoo.[19] Over time, hoodoo came to describe "the brand of African American supernaturalism found along the Mississippi", entailing the use of charms and spells that made little reference to deities; in this it differs from the specific religion characterized by the term Voodoo.[20]
Louisiana Voodoo is a secretive religion;[21] in 1972, for instance, the historian Blake Touchstone noted that Louisiana Voodoo was then largely being practiced outside the public eye.[22] Among some contemporary practitioners there is a tradition not to speak to non-adherents about Voodoo.[23] Louisiana Voodoo has not remained static, but has adapted and changed over time;[21] in its original form, it probably survived into the early 20th century.[24]
Voodoo is a largely oral tradition.[25] It has no formal creed,[26] not a specific sacred text,[27] and has no unifying organized structure or hierarchy.[28] Practitioners will often adapt Voodoo to suit their specific requirements,[29] in doing so often mixing it with other religious traditions.[30] Throughout its history, many Voodoo practitioners have also practiced Roman Catholicism.[30] While in the 21st century, Voodoo practitioners have for instance combined Voodoo with elements of Judaism and the Kabbalah,[30] or with Hinduism.[31]
Beliefs
[edit]Deities
[edit]Louisiana Voodoo had no formal theology,[26] although displayed its own spiritual hierarchy.[24] Many practitioners of Voodoo have not seen their religion as being in intrinsic conflict with the Roman Catholicism that was dominant along the Mississippi River.[20] The names of Louisiana Voodoo's deities were recorded in various 19th-century sources.[32] These deities seem to derive predominantly from spirits venerated around the Bight of Benin.[33] In contrast to Haitian Vodou, there is no evidence that these were divided into groups known as nanchon (nations).[34]
Tout, tout, pays blanc — Danié qui commandé
Danié qui commandé ça!
Danié qui commandé
— A song used among Louisiana field hands, recorded in 1885, that probably related to Blanc Dani[35]
One of the most important deities was Blanc Dani, also known as Daniel Blanc or Monsieur Danny.[36] The earliest records of him date from 1880,[35] and it is probable that he derives from Dan or Da, a deity venerated by the Fon and Ewe people whose worship centred largely around Ouidah.[37] In West Africa, Dan is associated with the color white and this may explain suggestions from the Louisiana material that Blanc Dani was perceived as a white man.[37] Although there are no specific references to Blanc Dani being a serpent, the prominence of snakes within Louisiana Voodoo might have been an allusion to Blanc Dani, for Dan is often associated with snakes in both West Africa and in his Haitian form, Damballa.[38] Another recorded name, Dambarra Soutons, may be an additional name for Blanc Dani.[39] A similar figure, Grandfather Rattlesnake, appeared in the 19th-century folklore of African-American Missourians and may also be a development of the same West African character.[40]
It is also possible that Blanc Dani was ultimately equated with another deity, known as the Grand Zombi, whose name meant "Great God" or "Great Spirit;"[32] the term Zombi derives from the Kongo Bantu term nzambi (god).[41] Another prominent deity was Papa Lébat, also called Liba, LaBas, or Laba Limba, and he was seen as a trickster as well as a doorkeeper;[32] he is the only one of these New Orleans deities with an unequivocally Yoruba origin.[42]
Monsieur Assonquer, also known as Onzancaire and On Sa Tier, was associated with good fortune, while Monsieur Agoussou or Vert Agoussou was associated with love.[32] Vériquité was a spirit associated with the causing of illness, while Monsieur d'Embarass was linked to death.[32] Charlo was a child deity.[32] The names of several other deities are recorded, but with little known about their associations, including Jean Macouloumba, who was also known as Colomba; Maman You; and Yon Sue.[32] There was also a deity called Samunga, called upon by practitioners in Missouri when they were collecting mud.[32]
The Voodoo revival of the late 20th century has drawn many of its deities from Haitian Vodou, where these divinities are called lwa[43]. Among the lwa commonly venerated are Erzulie Freda Ezili la Flambo, Ogoun, Mara, and Papa Legba.[44] These can be divided into separate nanchon (nations), such as the Rada and the Petwo. Glassman's New Orleans temple for instance has separate altars to the Rada and Petwo lwa.[45] Each of these is associated with particular items, colors, numbers, foodstuff, and drinks.[46] They are often considered to be intermediaries of God, who in Haitian Vodou is usually termed Le Bon Dieu.[47]
Ancestors and saints
[edit]The spirits of the dead played a prominent role in Louisiana Voodoo during the 19th century.[48] The prominence of these spirits of the dead may owe something to the fact that New Orleans' African American population was heavily descended from enslaved Kongolese, whose traditional religions placed emphasis on such spirits.[41] In the 21st century, Louisiana Voodoo has been characterized as a system of ancestor worship.[49] Communicating with the ancestors is an important part of its practice,[50] with these ancestral spirits often invoked during ceremonies.[51]
As Africans arrived in Louisiana, they adopted from Roman Catholicism and so various West African deities became associated with specific Roman Catholic saints.[52] Interviews with elderly New Orleanians conducted in the 1930s and 1940s suggested that, as it existed in the closing three decades of the 19th century, Voodoo primarily entailed supplications to the saints for assistance.[53] Among the most popular was Saint Anthony of Padua; this figure is also the patron saint of the Kongo, a likely link to the heavily Kongo-descended population of New Orleans.[54] Rejecting the centrality of the saints for her 21st-century practice, Osbey has described these saints as "servants and messengers of the Ancestors."[55] She related that, unlike in Haitian Vodou and Cuban Santería, the Roman Catholic saints retained their distinct identities rather than being equated with specific West African deities.[55]
Writing in the 2010s, the Voodoo practitioner and poet Brenda Marie Osbey described a belief in "a somewhat distant but single deity" being part of the religion,[55] while Rory O'Neill Schmitt and Rosary Hartel O'Neill expressed the belief that contemporary Voodoo was monotheistic.[47]
Morality, ethics, and gender roles
[edit]In its early 21st century form, Louisiana Voodoo accords particular respect to elders.[56]
Various commentators have described Louisiana Voodoo as matriarchal because of the dominant role priestesses have played in it.[57] Osbey described the religion as being "entirely within the sphere of women, whom we call Mothers."[58] The feminist theorist Tara Green defined the term "Voodoo Feminism" to describe instances whereby African American women drew upon both Louisiana Voodoo and conjure to resist racial and gender oppression that they experienced.[59] Michelle Gordon believed that the fact that free women of color dominated Voodoo in the 19th century represented a direct threat to the ideological foundations of "white supremacy and patriarchy."[60]
Practices
[edit]There are four phases to a Voodoo ritual, all identifiable by the song being sung: preparation, invocation, possession, and farewell. The songs are used to open the gate between the deities and the human world and invite the spirits to possess someone.[61] The rituals of Louisiana Voodoo are based on African traditions that have absorbed various Christian, and especially Roman Catholic, influences.[62] Reflecting this Roman Catholic influence, some recorded ceremonies have for instance begun with the recitation of the Apostles Creed and prayers to the Virgin Mary.[62]
In the 21st century, various Voodoo groups wear white clothing for their ceremonies.[63] Influenced by Haitian Vodou, those assembled may dance around a central post, the poto mitan.[64] Patterned flags, called drapos, may be brought out, while songs are sung in Haitian Kreyol.[64] Drawings, called vèvè , may be made on the floor to invoke the spirits.[65] Offerings will be given to the spirits.[66] Contemporary Voodoo rites often entail calling spirits to enter the body of a practitioner, through which they can heal or confer blessings.[67] The possessed individual will be called the "horse".[66]
Practitioners sometimes performed rituals to deal with specific issues; in August 1995, Voodoo practitioners held a ritual in the Bywater area of New Orleans to try to drive away crack cocaine abuse, burglaries, prostitution, and assaults,[68] while in 2001 the Voodoo priestess Ava Kay Jones performed a rite to drive harmful spirits away from the New Orleans Saints football team in the hope of improving their performance.[11]
Altars and offerings
[edit]Historical records describe the altars created by famous 19th-century Voodoo priestess Marie Laveau in her home;[69] Long noted that these descriptions resemble those of altars used in Haitian Vodou.[53]
Many contemporary practitioners have their own personal altars, often located in the kitchen or living room.[70] These altars are understood as assisting communication with ancestors,[71] with food and drink being offered to the ancestors at them.[72]
Sacrifice was a recurring element of Louisiana Voodoo as it was historically practiced,[73] as it continues to be in Haitian Vodou.[74] Some 21st-century practitioners of Louisiana Voodoo do sacrifice animals in their rites, subsequently cooking and eating the carcass.[74] It is nevertheless not a universal practice in Louisiana Voodoo;[74] Glassman's group prohibits animal sacrifice in its rites.[75] Although there is little proof that human sacrifice took place in Louisiana Voodoo, persistent rumors claimed that white children were being abducted and killed during some of its rites.[76]
Plates of food may be left out, encircled in a ring of coins.[77] Libations may be poured.[78]
Laveau used to hold weekly services, which were called parterres.[53] Music is often a part of rituals in Louisiana Voodoo.[79]
Many historical Voodoo rituals involved the presence of a snake;[80] Marie Laveau was for instance described as communing with a snake during her ceremonies.[50] This practice largely died out by the end of the 19th century, although some Voodoo revivalists have incorporated snake dances into their practices.[81] In the 21st century, the New Orleans Voodoo Spiritual Temple has had its own "temple snake."[82]
Gris-Gris and healing
[edit]Charms, created to either harm or help, are called gris-gris.[83] This term derives from West Africa, where related words are widespread among many ethnic and linguistic groups.[84] In the Mississippi River Valley, references to gris-gris first date from the 1750s.[84] The term Zinzin, sometimes referring to positive charms, derives from the Bamana language.[85] Another term, Wanga, was more commonly used for harmful charms in Voodoo and probably derives from West Central Africa, where the terms oganga and nganga were used for priests in Kikongo.[85] A common charm for protection or luck would consist of material wrapped up in red flannel and worn around the neck.[86]
Touchstone believed that gris-gris that caused actual harm did so either through the power of suggestion or by the fact that they contained poisons to which the victim was exposed.[86] One example of a Voodoo curse was to place an object inside the pillow of the victim.[87] Another involves placing a coffin (sometimes a small model; sometimes much larger) inscribed with the victim's name on their doorstep.[88] In other instances, Voodoo practitioners sought to hex others by placing black crosses, salt, or mixtures incorporating mustard, lizards, bones, oil, and grave dust on a victim's doorstep.[86] To counter these hexes, some people cleaned their doorstep or sprinkled it with powdered brick.[86] Despite its name, the idea of the Voodoo doll has little to do with either Louisiana Voodoo or Haitian Vodou; it derives from the European tradition of poppets.[89] It is possible that the act of inserting pins into a human-shaped doll to cause harm was erroneously linked to African-derived traditions due to a misunderstanding of the nkisi nkondi of Bakongo religion.[90]
Healing plays a prominent role in 21st century Louisiana Voodoo.[91] Various shops, called botanicas, exist in New Orleans to sell herbs and other material for use in these preparations.[92]
Glassman has produced her own New Orleans Voodoo Tarot, a tarot card set for use in divination.[93]
Animal sacrifice
[edit]Animal sacrifice is a traditional practice in Africa. It is done as an offering to the spirits, and also to ask a spirit to provide protection, healing, and other requests. When Africans were enslaved in the United States the practice continued in Voodoo and Hoodoo. The animals that are sacrificed are chickens. In West Africa among the Yoruba, blood sacrifices are left for Eshu-Elegba at the crossroads. The crossroads is a spiritual door way to the spiritual realm where Eshu-Elegba resides. This practice was brought to the United States during the transatlantic slave trade, and African Americans into the twentieth century performed animal blood sacrifices at the crossroads. Eshu-Elegba became the crossroads spirit or the man of the crossroads in Voodoo.[95][96][97] Animal sacrifice has become a rare practice in the African American community. However, animal sacrifice was documented well into the late nineteenth century and into mid-twentieth century.[98] For example, animal sacrifices are sometimes done at the crossroads as an offering to the crossroad spirit and to ask the spirit or spirits for a request. At Stagville Plantation located in Durham County, North Carolina, enslaved Africans performed animal sacrifice to call forth spirits for assistance in the slave community.[99] At the Kingsley Plantation at Fort George Island, Florida, archeologists found evidence of West African animal sacrifice inside a slave cabin. West-Central African people were illegally imported into Florida after 1814 by plantation owner Kingsley. The African people imported were Angolan, Igbo, Senegambian and from Zanzibar. The spiritual cultures of these enslaved Africans fused into one Voodoo culture on the plantation. Archeologists found inside a slave cabin in the northeast section an intact sacrificed chicken and other charms (blue beads and red clay brick) for rituals to conjure spirits for protection.[100] In 1883 in Alabama, a rootworker sacrificed a chicken to leave a blood offering to the spirits to remove a spiritual work (spell).[101] An African American man in North Carolina sacrificed a chicken at a crossroads "asking salvation from an epidemic" from a disease that killed off his farm animals.[102][103] Zora Neale Hurston recorded in her book Mules and Men an animal sacrifice of nine black chickens in the twentieth century. A Hoodoo man named Turner in New Orleans, Louisiana performed an animal sacrifice for a client who wanted her brother in-law to leave her alone. Turner sat at his snake altar and meditated on his clients situation, and afterwards told Hurston to purchase nine black chickens and some Four Thieves Vinegar. Turner and Hurston performed a ritual including the nine black chickens and Four Thieves Vinegar at night to ask the spirits and the spirits of the chickens sacrificed for his clients brother in-law to stop bothering her. The ritual included Turner dancing in a circle swirling the chickens in his hand, and killed them by taking off their heads, and Hurston continued to beat the ground with a stick in order to produce a rhythmic sound in sync with Turner's dancing. Where the ritual took place Four Thieves Vinegar was poured onto the ground.[104] In some African American Spiritual churches, the sacrifice of live chickens to heal church members was practiced in a Spiritual church in New Orleans by Mother Catherine Seals in the early to mid-twentieth century.[105]
Communal festivals
[edit]Communal festivals were also part of Mississippi River Voodoo.[85] A common gathering in Louisiana Voodoo was on the night of the 23 or 24 June, St John's Eve,[106] with big celebrations on this date has taken place on the shores of Lake Pontchartrain during the 19th century.[53] Some 21st-century Voodoo congregations continue to celebrate on St John's Eve;[107] others, such as Osbey, reject the idea that St John's Eve is important in Louisiana Voodoo.[108] Various contemporary practitioners celebrate All Saints Day (1 November) which they, following Haitian Vodou, link with the lwa Gede.[109]
History
[edit]French and Spanish Louisiana
[edit]Much mystery surrounds the origins of Louisiana Voodoo,[14] with its history often being embellished with legend.[110] French settlers arrived in Louisiana in 1699, with the first enslaved Africans being brought to the colony in 1719.[111] In 1763 the Spanish Empire took control and remained in power until 1803.[111] The religions of the West African slaves combined with elements of the folk Catholicism practiced by the dominant French and Spanish colonists to provide the origins of Louisiana Voodoo.[112] Under the French and Spanish colonial governments, Voodoo did not experience strong persecution; there are no records of the Roman Catholic Church waging "anti-superstition campaigns" against the religion in Louisiana.[112]
All of the West African groups contributed to the development of Louisiana Voodoo. Their knowledge of herbs, poisons, and the ritual creation of charms and amulets, intended to protect oneself or harm others, became key elements of Louisiana Voodoo.[113] During the French colonial period, around 80 percent of the enslaved Africans brought to Louisiana were from the Bambara people of the Senegal River basin.[41] Most of the other 20 percent were Kongolese, with a few from Dahomey.[41] After the Spanish took control, increasing numbers of slaves were imported from the Kongo, ensuring a "Kongolization of New Orleans's African American community".[41]
The enslaved community quickly outnumbered white European colonists who emigrated there. The French colony was not a stable society when the enslaved sub-Saharan Africans arrived, and the newly arrived sub-Saharan Africans dominated the slave community. According to a census of 1731–1732, the ratio of enslaved sub-Saharan Africans to European settlers was more than two to one.[114] A relatively small number of colonists were planters and slaveholders, owners of sugar plantations with work that required large labor forces. Because the Africans were held in large groups relatively isolated from interaction with whites, their preservation of African indigenous practices and culture was enabled.[115] In northern Louisiana and other European colonies in the American South, enslaved families were usually divided; large numbers of African slaves who were once closely related by family or community were sent to different plantations. However, in southern Louisiana, families, cultures, and languages were kept more intact than in the north. This allowed the cultural traditions, languages, and religious practices of the enslaved to continue there.[116]
Under the French code and the influence of Catholicism, officials nominally recognized family groups, prohibiting the sale of slave children away from their families if younger than age fourteen. They promoted the man-made legend of wake tuko[clarification needed] of the enslaved population.[117] The high mortality of the slave trade brought its survivors together with a sense of solidarity and initiation. The absence of fragmentation in the enslaved community, along with the kinship system produced by the bond created by the difficulties of slavery, resulted in a "coherent, functional, well-integrated, autonomous, and self-confident enslaved community."[118]
The practice of making and wearing charms and amulets for protection, healing, or the harm of others was a key aspect to early Louisiana Voodoo.[119] The Ouanga, a charm used to poison an enemy, contained the toxic roots of the figuier maudit tree, brought from Africa and preserved in Louisiana. The ground-up root was combined with other elements, such as bones, nails, roots, holy water, holy candles, holy incense, holy bread, or crucifixes. The administrator of the ritual frequently evoked protection from Jehovah and Jesus Christ. This openness of African belief allowed for the adoption of Catholic practices into Louisiana Voodoo.[120]
Another element brought from West Africa was the veneration of ancestors and the subsequent emphasis on respect for elders. For this reason, the rate of survival among elderly enslaved peoples was high, further "Africanizing Louisiana Creole culture."[121] Records of African traditional religious practices being practiced in Louisiana go back to the 1730s, when Antoine-Simon Le Page du Pratz wrote about the use of gris-gris.[122]
19th Century
[edit]In 1803, the United States took control of Louisiana through the Louisiana Purchase.[123] This resulted in a large influx of Anglo-Americans into the region.[85] These Anglo-Americans often had some familiarity with African-derived traditions, such as the John Canoe festivities on the Atlantic coast and the Pinkster celebrations in New York, but were unaccustomed to a fully developed African-derived religion with its own deities and priests. They thus often regarded Voodoo as an exotic and primitive superstition.[106] The Anglo-American influx also brought new influences to Voodoo as well as increased attention, including a surge in 19th and early 20th-century newspaper coverage.[106]
The start of the 19th centuries also saw the Haitian Revolution, whereby African-descended populations in the French Caribbean colony of Saint-Domingue overthrew the French colonial government and established an independent republic, Haiti.[124] As a result of the upheaval, between 15,000 and 20,000 Francophone migrants from Saint-Domingue arrived in the Mississippi River Valley as a result of the Revolution, including those of African, European, and mixed descent.[125] Many would have been familiar with Haitian Vodou and their arrival in continental North America likely reinforced and influenced Louisiana Voodoo.[126]
According to legend, the first meeting place of the Voodoo practitioners in New Orleans was at an abandoned brickyard in Dumaine Street. Those meetings here faced police disruption and so future meetings took place largely in Bayou St. John and along the shores of Lake Pontchartrain.[127] The religion probably appealed to members of the African diaspora, whether enslaved or free, who lacked recourse to retribution for the poor treatment they received through other means.[128] Voodoo probably spread out from Louisiana and into African American communities throughout the Mississippi River Valley, as there are 19th-century references to Voodoo rituals in both St. Louis and St. Joseph in Missouri.[24]
Voodoo was never explicitly banned in Louisiana.[124] However, amid establishment fears that Voodoo may be used to foment a slave rebellion, in 1817 the Municipal issued an ordinance preventing slaves from dancing on days other than on Sundays and in locations other than those specifically designated for that purpose. The main location permitted was New Orleans' Congo Square.[129] Voodoo dance rituals nevertheless continued clandestinely at other locations.[5] In the early part of the 19th century, newspapers articles began denouncing the religion.[124] In August 1850, about fifty women, several of whom were white, were arrested at a Voodoo dance ceremony; they were subsequently fined.[130] In 1855 a mob attempted to seize a practitioner, Elizabeth Sutherland, who they accused of putting spells on people; the local police gave her shelter at the station.[131]
During the American Civil War, the Union Army occupied New Orleans and sought to suppress Voodoo.[128] In 1863, forty women were arrested at a Voodoo dance ceremony in Marais Street.[132] Repression of Voodoo intensified following the Civil War;[133] the 1870s onward saw white writers display an increased concern that Voodoo rituals were facilitating the interaction between black men and white women.[134] That decade saw large gatherings at Lake Pontchartrain on St John's Eve, including many onlookers and reporters;[135] these declined after 1876.[136] In the 1880s and 1890s, the New Orleans authorities again clamped down on Voodoo.[136] Voodoo was used as evidence to bolster the white elite's claim that Africans were inferior to Europeans and thus bolster their belief in the necessity of legalized segregation.[137]
Various practitioners set up shops selling paraphernalia and charms,[138] they also began exploiting the commercial opportunities of the religion by staging ceremonies which charged entry.[133]
Prominent figures
[edit]Free women of color dominated the leadership of Voodoo in New Orleans during the 19th century.[60] They made a living through the selling and administering of amulets, or "gris-gris" charms, and magical powers, as well as spells and charms that guaranteed to "cure ailments, grant desires, and confound or destroy one's enemies".[139] As in other French colonial communities, a class of free people of color developed who were given specific rights and, in New Orleans, acquired property and education. Free women of color had a relatively high amount of influence, particularly those who were spiritual leaders.[139]
Among the fifteen "voodoo queens" in neighborhoods scattered around 19th-century New Orleans, Marie Laveau was known as "the Voodoo Queen", the most eminent and powerful of them all. Her religious rite on the shore of Lake Pontchartrain on St. John's Eve in 1874 attracted some 12,000 black and white New Orleanians.[140] Although her help seemed non-discriminatory, she may have favored enslaved servants: Her most "influential, affluent customers...runaway slaves...credited their successful escapes to Laveau's powerful charms".[140] Both her mother and grandmother had practiced Voodoo;[141] she was also baptized a Roman Catholic and attended mass throughout her life.[142]
Laveau worked as a hairdresser, but also assisted others with the preparation of herbal remedies and charms.[18] She died in 1881.[143] Her influence continues in the city. In the 21st century, her gravesite in the oldest cemetery is a major tourist attraction; believers of Voodoo offer gifts here and pray to her spirit.[140] Across the street from the cemetery where Laveau is buried, offerings of pound cake are left to the statue of Saint Expedite; these offerings are believed to expedite the favors asked of the Voodoo queen. Saint Expedite represents the spirit standing between life and death. The chapel where the statue stands were once used only for holding funerals.[144] Marie Laveau continues to be a central figure of Louisiana Voodoo and of New Orleans culture. Gamblers shout her name when throwing dice, and multiple tales of sightings of the Voodoo Queen have been told.[144]
Another of the most prominent practitioners of the mid-19th century was Jean Montanée or "Dr John", a free black man who sold cures and other material to various clients, amassing sufficient funds to purchase several slaves. He alleged that he was a prince from Senegal who had been taken to Cuba and there freed before coming to Louisiana.[145][146]
20th and 21st centuries
[edit]By the early 20th century, there were no more publicly prominent Voodoo practitioners active in New Orleans.[147] According to the historian Carolyn Morrow Long, "Voodoo, as an organized religion, had been thoroughly suppressed by the legal system, public opinion, and Christianity."[147] In the late 1930s and early 1940s, the first serious attempts to document Voodoo's history were made.[133] As part of the government's Works Progress Administration, the Louisiana Writers' Project financed fieldworkers to interview seventy elderly black New Orleanians regarding their experience with Voodoo as it existed between the 1870s and 1890s; many recounted tales of Marie Laveau.[148] This interview material was used as a partial basis for the journalist Robert Tallant's Voodoo in New Orleans; first published in 1946, it engaged in sensationalist coverage although came to be regarded as the pre-eminent work on the subject throughout the century.[149]
As Voodoo as a communal religion devoted to worshiping deities and ancestors declined, many of its practices that were designed to control or influence events and people continued to be practiced, often being termed hoodoo.[147] In New Orleans, hoodoo displayed greater Roman Catholic influences than similar African American folk practices elsewhere in the southern states.[147] Specialists in hoodoo, known as "doctors" or "workers", often worked out of their homes or shops providing gris-gris, powders, oils, perfume, and incense to clients.[147] Such practices concerned the Anglo-Protestant elite, with regulations being introduced to restrict various healing and fortune-telling practices in the city, resulting in many hoodoo practitioners being convicted, and either fined or imprisoned, in the first half of the 20th century.[150]
The civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s marked a new period in which the New Orleans tourist industry increasingly recognized African American culture as an integral aspect of the city's heritage.[151] From the 1960s onward, the city's tourist industry increasingly referenced Louisiana Voodoo as a means of attracting visitors.[152][153] In 1972, Charles Gandolfo established the tourist-oriented New Orleans Historic Voodoo Museum.[154] In New Orleans' French Quarter, as well as through mail-order catalogs and later the Internet, salespeople began selling paraphernalia that they claimed was associated with Voodoo.[152] Several companies also began providing walking tours of the city pointing out locations alleged to have a prominent role in the history of Voodoo, and in some cases staging Voodoo rituals for paying onlookers.[152] One company, Voodoo Authentica, began organizing an annual Voodoofest in Congo Square each Halloween, involving various stalls selling food and paraphernalia and a public Voodoo ceremony.[155]
In the latter part of the 20th century, Voodoo saw a resurgence in New Orleans, a phenomenon reflecting some survivals from earlier practices, some imports from other African diasporic traditions, and some consciously revivalist approaches.[11] Various groups emerged; in 1990 the African American Miriam Chamani established the Voodoo Spiritual Temple in the French Quarter, which venerated deities from Haitian Vodou and Cuban Santería.[156] A Ukrainian-Jewish American initiate of Haitian Vodou, Sallie Ann Glassman, launched another group, La Source Ancienne, in the Bywater neighborhood; she also operated the Island of Salvation Botanica store.[157] The most publicly prominent of the new Voodoo practitioners was Ava Kay Jones, a Louisiana Creole woman who had been initiated into both Haitian Vodou and Orisha-Vodu, a U.S.-based derivative of Santería.[158] Long believed that these groups reflected a "Voodoo revival" rather than a direct continuation of 18th and 19th century traditions; she noted that this new Voodoo typically resembled Haitian Vodou or Santería more than the 19th-century Louisiana Voodoo.[11] These groups sought to promote understanding of their religion through websites, newsletters, and workshops.[11]
Demographics
[edit]Some children are born into families that already practice Louisiana Voodoo; others come to the religion on their own.[30] In 1873, the Times Picayune estimated that there were about 300 dedicated practitioners of Voodoo in New Orleans, with about a thousand looser adherents.[138] In 2014, Newsweek reported a claim—cited to "locals"—that there had been between 2,500 and 3,000 practitioners in New Orleans at the start of the 21st century, but that following Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent dispersal of much of the city's population, that number was down to under 300.[159]
19th-century accounts suggest that white involvement was always a minority in Voodoo.[160] White people have been involved in Louisiana Voodoo since its early years;[21] oral accounts recorded in the 1930s and 1940s suggest that many of Marie Laveau's followers and clients had been white.[147] Tallant noted that, as of the 1940s, about a third of the religion's practitioners were white.[21] Tallant also thought that about 80 percent of practitioners were female.[161]
Long noted that the "Voodoo revival" of the late 20th century had attracted many "well-educated" and middle-class Americans, both black and white.[11] Glassman's group has been described as having a white-majority membership.[75] In a 1995 article for The New York Times, Rick Bragg noted that many contemporary practitioners were "white people — nose and tongue piercers, middle-aged intellectuals and men with foot-long ponytails — who enjoy the religion's drumming and cultural aspects."[68] Osbey thought that this revival was appealing, especially to "young-ish whites", because they felt it offered "something at once forbidden, magical and compelling in its dramatic appeal"; in her view they were not real practitioners of Louisiana Voodoo because they do not descend from the ancestral spirits that the religion venerates.[162]
Reception
[edit]Like New Orleans itself, Louisiana Voodoo has long evoked both "fascination and disapproval" from the Anglo-dominated American mainstream.[163] Louisiana Voodoo has gained negative connotations in wider American society, being linked to witchcraft and hexing;[164] Protestant groups, including those present among the black New Orleanian population, have denounced Voodoo as devil worship.[147] During the 19th century, many Anglo-Protestant arrivals to New Orleans also considered Voodoo a threat to public safety and morality;[165] white writers in the late 19th century often expressed concern about the opportunities for miscegenation provided by Voodoo ceremonies, especially the presence of white women near to black men.[134] By the late 20th century, it was gaining increasing recognition as a legitimate religion of the African diaspora.[166]
Sensationalist portrayals of Voodoo have been featured in a range of films and popular novels.[164] The 1987 film Angel Heart connected Louisiana Voodoo with Satanism;[152] the 2004 film The Skeleton Key evoked many older stereotypes although made greater reference to the actual practices of Louisiana Voodoo.[164] The 2009 Disney film The Princess and the Frog, which is set in New Orleans, depicted the character of Mama Odie as a practitioner of Vodou.[167] Characters practicing Louisiana Voodoo were also incorporated into the 2013 U.S. television series American Horror Story: Coven, where they were described as a coven of witches active since the 17th century.[168]
Voodoo has also influenced popular music, as seen in songs like Jimi Hendrix's "Voodoo Chile" and Colin James' "Voodoo Thing".[169] The New Orleans singer Mac Rebennack took on the stage name of Dr. John after the 19th-century Voodoo practitioner and made heavy use of Voodoo terminology and aesthetics in his music; his first album, released in 1968, was titled Gris-Gris.[170]
Elements of Voodoo were incorporated into the black Spiritual churches whose teachings drew upon Roman Catholicism, Spiritualism, and Pentecostalism.[147][171]
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Long 2002, p. 87; Anderson 2008, p. x; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 11, 13.
- ^ Anderson 2008, p. 1.
- ^ Anderson 2008, p. x; Anderson 2024, p. 12.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 86; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 17.
- ^ a b Tallant 1983, p. 18.
- ^ Fandrich 2007, p. 779.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 2.
- ^ Anderson 2008, p. x; Anderson 2024, p. 1-2.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 11.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 9.
- ^ a b c d e f Long 2002, p. 96.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 104.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 3.
- ^ a b Touchstone 1972, p. 373.
- ^ Anderson 2008, p. x.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 87; Fandrich 2007, p. 775.
- ^ Tallant 1983, pp. 5, 6; Touchstone 1972, p. 373.
- ^ a b O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 62.
- ^ Anderson 2008, p. xi; Anderson 2024, p. 23.
- ^ a b Anderson 2008, p. xi.
- ^ a b c d Tallant 1983, p. 16.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, p. 386.
- ^ Osbey 2011, p. 6.
- ^ a b c Anderson 2008, p. 14.
- ^ Crockett 2018, p. 154; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 59.
- ^ a b Crockett 2018, p. 154.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 59.
- ^ Crockett 2018, p. 154; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 15.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 29.
- ^ a b c d O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 17.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 103.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Anderson 2008, p. 15.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 20.
- ^ Anderson 2024, pp. 11–12.
- ^ a b Anderson 2024, p. 33.
- ^ Anderson 2008, p. 15; Anderson 2024, p. 33.
- ^ a b Anderson 2024, p. 35.
- ^ Anderson 2024, pp. 35–36.
- ^ Anderson 2008, p. 15; Anderson 2024, p. 36.
- ^ Anderson 2024, pp. 37–38.
- ^ a b c d e Fandrich 2007, p. 786.
- ^ Fandrich 2007, p. 787.
- ^ "Erzulies Voodoo - Vodou Lwa, Voodoo Spirits and Catholic Saint Counterparts". 19 January 2021.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 14–15.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 22.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 14.
- ^ a b O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 13.
- ^ Fandrich 2007, p. 786; Anderson 2008, p. 16.
- ^ Reuber 2011, p. 8; Osbey 2011, p. 8.
- ^ a b O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 65.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 16.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 44.
- ^ a b c d Long 2002, p. 91.
- ^ Fandrich 2007, pp. 786–787.
- ^ a b c Osbey 2011, p. 8.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 49.
- ^ Tallant 1983, p. 21; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 49.
- ^ Osbey 2011, p. 4.
- ^ Green 2012, p. 283.
- ^ a b Gordon 2012, p. 772.
- ^ Mulira, Jessie Gaston. "The Case of Voodoo in New Orleans," in Holloway, Joseph E. ed. Africanisms in American Culture, 34–68. 1st ed. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 1990.
- ^ a b Tallant 1983, p. 29.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 23.
- ^ a b O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 24.
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- ^ a b O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 26.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 141.
- ^ a b Bragg 1995.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 60.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 130, 145.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 133.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 142.
- ^ Tallant 1983, p. 15; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 43.
- ^ a b c O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 34.
- ^ a b Fandrich 2007, p. 778.
- ^ Tallant 1983, p. 15.
- ^ Tallant 1983, pp. 22–23.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 106.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 30.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 43, 118.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 33–34.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 118.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, p. 371; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 18.
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- ^ a b c d Touchstone 1972, p. 384.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, p. 383.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, pp. 383–384.
- ^ Armitage 2015, pp. 85–86.
- ^ Armitage 2015, pp. 98–99.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 114–115.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 20.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 119.
- ^ McCarthy, John P. (2015). "MOJO WORKIN': The Old African American Hoodoo System by Katrina Hazzard-Donald (review)". American Studies. 54 (1): 147–148. doi:10.1353/ams.2015.0009. S2CID 144875580.
- ^ Pemberton, John (1975). "Eshu-Elegba: The Yoruba Trickster God". African Arts. 9 (1): 20–92. doi:10.2307/3334976. JSTOR 3334976.
- ^ Hazzard-Donald (30 December 2012). Mojo Workin The Old African American Hoodoo System. University of Illinois Press. p. 93. ISBN 9780252094460.
- ^ Anderson, Jeffrey (2015). The Voodoo Encyclopedia Magic, Ritual, and Religion. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781610692090.
- ^ Chireau (2006). Black Magic Religion and the African American Conjuring Tradition. University of California Press. p. 55. ISBN 9780520249882.
- ^ Jones (1998). Sacred Places and Holy Ground: West African Spiritualism at Stagville Plantation. University of Virginia Press. p. 106. ISBN 9780813918242.
- ^ Davidson, James M. (2015). ""A Cluster of Sacred Symbols": Interpreting an Act of Animal Sacrifice at Kingsley Plantation, Fort George Island, Florida (1814–39)". International Journal of Historical Archaeology. 19 (1): 77, 82–84, 94, 97, 108. doi:10.1007/s10761-014-0282-1. JSTOR 24572369. S2CID 162647323.
- ^ Kail, Tony (2019). Stories of Rootworkers & Hoodoo in the Mid-South. History Press. pp. 69–70. ISBN 9781439668276.
- ^ Hazzard-Donald (30 December 2012). Mojo Workin The Old African American Hoodoo System. University of Illinois Press. pp. 35, 57, 93. ISBN 9780252094460.
- ^ Gundaker (1998). Keep Your Head to the Sky Interpreting African American Home Ground. University of Virginia Press. pp. 41–42. ISBN 9780813918242.
- ^ Hurston, Zora Neale (1990). Mules and Men. HarperCollins. pp. 204–205. ISBN 9780060916480.
- ^ Jacobs, Claude (1991). The Spiritual churches of New Orleans : origins, beliefs, and rituals of an African-American religion. University of Tennessee Press. p. 150. ISBN 9780870497025.
- ^ a b c Anderson 2024, p. 26.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 99.
- ^ Osbey 2011, pp. 4–5.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 93.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, p. 372.
- ^ a b Long 2002, p. 87; Crockett 2018, p. 156.
- ^ a b Long 2002, p. 87.
- ^ Hall, Gwendolyn Midlo (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana: The Development of Afro-Creole Culture in the Eighteenth Century. Louisiana State University Press. p. 58.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 160.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 162.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 159.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 168.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 159.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 163.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 165.
- ^ Hall (1995). Africans in Colonial Louisiana. p. 186.
- ^ Crockett 2018, p. 156.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 87; Crockett 2018, p. 156; Anderson 2024, p. 25.
- ^ a b c Long 2002, p. 88.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 27.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 28.
- ^ Tallant 1983, p. 12; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 42–43.
- ^ a b Touchstone 1972, p. 374.
- ^ Tallant 1983, p. 18; Gordon 2012, p. 773; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 42.
- ^ Tallant 1983, pp. 24–25.
- ^ Tallant 1983, p. 25.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, p. 375.
- ^ a b c Long 2002, p. 90.
- ^ a b Gordon 2012, pp. 769–770.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, pp. 377–378.
- ^ a b Touchstone 1972, p. 381.
- ^ Touchstone 1972, p. 386; Long 2002, p. 90.
- ^ a b Touchstone 1972, p. 382.
- ^ a b Bell, Caryn Cossé Bell. "Review of The Mysterious Voodoo Queen, Mary Laveau: A Study of Powerful Female Leadership in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans by Ina Johanna Fandrich," Labour/Le Travail, Vol. 61 (Spring 2008) Print.
- ^ a b c Fandrich, J. Ina. "The Birth of New Orleans' Voodoo Queen: A Long-Held Mystery Resolved. Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, Vol. 46, No. 3 (Summer, 2005) Print.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 58.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 53.
- ^ O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 70.
- ^ a b Ravitz, Jessica (Nov 24, 2008). "Unveiling New Orleans Voodoo". The Salt Lake Tribune.
- ^ Tallant 1983, pp. 33–35; Gordon 2012, p. 779.
- ^ "New Orleans Voodoo". Western Folklore. 16 (1): 60–61. January 1957. doi:10.2307/1497071. ISSN 0043-373X. JSTOR 1497071.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Long 2002, p. 92.
- ^ Long 2002, pp. 90–91.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 94.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 93; Crockett 2018, p. 164.
- ^ Crockett 2018, p. 169.
- ^ a b c d Long 2002, p. 95.
- ^ "Katrina Disperses New Orleans' Voodoo Community". NPR. October 21, 2005. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
- ^ Fandrich 2007, pp. 777–778; Crockett 2018, p. 167.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 95; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, pp. 90–92.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 97; Fandrich 2007, p. 778; Crockett 2018, p. 167; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019, p. 36.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 97; Fandrich 2007, p. 778; Crockett 2018, p. 167; O'Neill Schmitt & Hartel O'Neill 2019.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 97; Crockett 2018, p. 167.
- ^ Anderson 2014.
- ^ Anderson 2024, p. 6.
- ^ Tallant 1983, p. 21.
- ^ Osbey 2011, p. 10.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 86.
- ^ a b c Reuber 2011, p. 8.
- ^ Long 2002, p. 93.
- ^ Crockett 2018, pp. 167–168.
- ^ Ferguson 2016, p. 1226.
- ^ LeBlanc 2018, pp. 274–275.
- ^ Ferguson 2016, p. 1224.
- ^ Ferguson 2016, p. 1231.
- ^ Jacobs, Claude F.; Kaslow, Andrew J. (1991). The Spiritual Churches of New Orleans: Origins, Beliefs, and Rituals of an African-American Religion. The University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 1572331488.
Sources
[edit]- Alvarado, Denise (2020). The Magic of Marie Laveau: Embracing the Spiritual egacy of the Voodoo Queen of New Orleans. Newsburyport, MA.: Weiser Books. p. xi, 46. ISBN 978-1-57863-673-0.
- Anderson, Jeffrey (2008). Hoodoo, Voodoo, and Conjure: A Handbook. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0313342219.
- Anderson, Jeffrey E. (2024). Voodoo: An African American Religion. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-8132-4.
- Anderson, Stacey (August 25, 2014). "Voodoo Is Rebounding in New Orleans After Hurricane Katrina". Newsweek. Retrieved May 2, 2021.
- Armitage, Natalie (2015). "European and African Figural Ritual Magic: The Beginnings of the Voodoo Doll Myth". In Ceri Houlbrook; Natalie Armitage (eds.). The Materiality of Magic: An Artifactual Investigation into Ritual Practices and Popular Beliefs. Oxford: Oxbow. pp. 85–101. ISBN 978-1785700101.
- Bragg, Rick (August 18, 1995). "New Orleans Conjures Old Spirits Against Modern Woes". The New York Times. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
- Crockett, I'Nasah (2018). "Twentieth-Century Voodoo: Black Culture, Cultural Geographies, and the Meaning of Place". In Dennis Waskul; Marc Eaton (eds.). The Supernatural in Society, Culture, and History. Philadelphia: Philadelphia University Press. pp. 152–170. ISBN 978-1439915257.
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- Ferguson, Josh-Wade (2016). ""Traded it off for that Voodoo Thing": Cultural Capital and Vernacular Debt in Disney's Representation of New Orleans". The Journal of Popular Culture. 49 (6): 1224–1240. doi:10.1111/jpcu.12486.
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- Gordon, Michelle (2012). ""Midnight Scenes and Orgies": Public Narratives of Voodoo in New Orleans and Nineteenth-Century Discourses of White Supremacy". American Quarterly. 64 (4): 767–786. doi:10.1353/aq.2012.0060. JSTOR 4231284. S2CID 143787706.
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- Long, Carolyn Morrow (2002). "Perceptions of New Orleans Voodoo: Sin, Fraud, Entertainment, and Religion". Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions. 6 (1): 86–101. doi:10.1525/nr.2002.6.1.86. JSTOR 10.1525/nr.2002.6.1.86.
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