Abstract
In this article, I explore the way that a work song called “Hooyaalaadee” reveals the importance of women’s textile labor to the Banaadiri people, the Somali nation and the wider Indian Ocean textile industry. Although written historiography has not adequately documented southern Somalia’s rich textile industry, the Banaadiri woman facilitates a multitude of narratives about this important textile trade through performing this oral work song. “Hooyaalaadee” shows the way that an oral poem can be an alternative means through which to preserve and archive the histories of textile production within the Banaadiri community. I argue that in “Hooyaalaadee,” the Banaadiri woman’s role as the spinner of cotton in the manufacture of the Futa Benaadir, a cloth spun and woven by the Banaadiri community as well as the weaver of hats, mats and baskets, is generative of strong kinship networks. The Banaadiri women create the threads to not only bind the Banaadiri community together as a unit but also to connect the Banaadiri people with the Somali nation and the wider Indian Ocean world. I read Amitav Ghosh’s 1986 novel The Circle of Reason to bring into relief many of the ideas around regionally-specific identity, community and culture which emerge from “Hooyaalaadee”.
Funding Information
  • SWW DTP

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