Andres Jimenez End of Participation and Changes after the Road

Interviewee: Andrés Jiménez
Biography: Andrés Jiménez was a retired teacher born and raised in Portobelo. At the time of this interview, he was 69 years old. In addition to having witnessed the Congo tradition of Portobleo since childhood, he participated in the role of priest at one time. His son, Raúl Jiménez, has participated in the role of Major Devil. Early in her 2003 field research, Alexander Craft visited Maestro Andrés at the restaurant attached to his home twice weekly for the first six weeks for Spanish lessons. As an extension of the lessons, Jiménez allowed her the opportunity to interview him about the Congo tradition.
Excerpt Description: In this excerpt, Maestro Andrés discusses his reasons for no longer participating in the Congo tradition and the changes he has seen in the tradition with the advent of "the road."
Entire Interview: Listen to the full interview and read the transcript.
Interviewer: Renee Alexander Craft
Secondary Interviewer: n/a
Date of Interview: 26-Feb-03
Interview Location: On the front porch of Andrés Jiménez' family restaurant in Portobelo, Panama
Interview Transcribed By: Gustavo Esquina, Oronike Odeleye
English Translation By: Oronike Odeleye
Ethnoracial Identity Discussed: Afrocolonial, Afrodescendiente, La Raza Negra
Cultural Identity: Congo
Location Mentioned: Portobelo, Panama
Congo Spaces:
Congo Characters: Congos, Devils and Devil Tradition, El Pajarito/ The Messenger, Major Devil
Congo Tradition Mentioned: Congo characters, Congo culture, Congo embodiment, Congo game, Devil embodiment
Cultural Organization: N/A
Themes Mentioned: After "the road", Before "the road", Cultural change
Cultural Festivals: N/A
People Mentioned: N/A
Time Period Mentioned: After "the road", Before "the road"
Go to SoundCloud page
Look at first Transcript file
Look at second Transcript file
Timestamp: 00:06:26.0-00:11:55.0

Photo by: Elaine Eversley