Cucua (Devil Dance) jacket

Clothing/Dress/Costume

-

Purdue University Galleries

Name/Title

Cucua (Devil Dance) jacket

Entry/Object ID

1984.08.01.02

Description

bark cloth, wild boar jawbone, deer antlers

Acquisition

Accession

1984.08

Source or Donor

Elizabeth Fulcher

Acquisition Method

Gift

Credit Line

Gift of Mrs. Elizabeth Fulcher

Made/Created

Date made

1963

Ethnography

Notes

The Cucua folklore dancers make their devil dance costumes from cucua tree bark and deer horns. The devil dances have their origin in European masques. Especially after the plague, the macabre and the devil were themes for many celebrations. In the case of the devil dances in Panama, they all serve a religious purpose: the evangelization of the other. So they came to be a vivid image of the battle between good and evil that promoted conversion. Most of the devil dances are usually practiced for the religious feast of Corpus Christi, which celebrates the presence of Jesus in the host. These practices are colonial, but there are no dates that can specify as to when they started.

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Costume, Holiday

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Holiday Objects

Nomenclature Class

Ceremonial Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects