Cimarrón Spirit: Afro-Dominican Maroon Culture

Cimarrón Spirit: Afro-Dominican Maroon Culture

2015
41m
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Overview

In the Dominican Republic, as early as 1512, African slaves escaped from Spanish plantations and lived with the island’s Taíno Indians or on their own in mountainous jungles in the remote frontier land of Hispaniola. These people who were known as “cimarrones,” meaning “maroons,” created their own independent communities that have survived for centuries and until recently remained isolated from mainstream Dominican society. These resilient and resourceful “outlaws” have long developed their own celebrations, many of which mock a society that enslaved and branded them. Cimarrón Spirit explores carnival traditions such as the ritualistic fire burning of the masks and costumes of “Judas,” “Cocorícamo,” and “Tifúas,” as figures important to the cimarrón culture of Elias Piña.

Status: Released

Language: EN

Production Information

Spoken Languages
English Spanish

Quick Facts

Release Date January 1, 2015
Status Released
Language EN

Cast

Key Crew

Ruben Duran
Director