Abstract This article examines how the Gelede festival of the Yoruba people transcended colonial impositions by maintaining cultural continuity while facilitating social transformations, with women occupying a central role. By analyzing the impact of colonialism on gender dynamics and indigenous institutions, it reveals how the colonial encounter paradoxically empowered Yoruba women amid broader institutional destabilization. Focusing on the Gelede festival, the study demonstrates its resilience in retaining core political structures despite the colonial upheaval. Archival evidence highlights how the Gelede cult's veneration of Awon Agbalagba Obirin (revered elderly women) subverted patriarchal narratives, reflecting precolonial traditions of feminine spiritual authority. As Yoruba festivals like Gelede persisted, women assumed a central role, preserving cultural continuity while catalyzing transformations that challenged rigid gender constructs. This finding contradicts narratives of the wholesale imposition of colonial patriarchy and African cultural stasis. Finally, this work elucidates the complexities of colonial encounters, illuminating the fortitude of Yoruba culture and the centrality of women's traditions in navigating continuity and change.
Olusegun Olatunji (Wed,) studied this question.
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