Midnight skin, fiery vertical eyes, long tails, donkey legs, big ears, and an insatiable taste for palm dates and little children, the Aman Doger1 is the stuff of Nubian nightmares. But what is it exactly? In this week’s episode of the Mythological Africans podcast, we start with some Sudanese cities whose names are influenced by the Nile, and then meet this fearsome river creature of Nubian folklore.
References
Gerasimov I. V. “About the Origin of Some Sudanese Toponyms.” Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Asian and African Studies, 2024, vol. 16, issue 3, pp. 558–566.
Kennedy, John G. “Aman Doger: Nubian Monster of the Nile.” The Journal of American Folklore, vol. 83, no. 330, 1970, pp. 438–45. JSTOR.
Can’t Get Enough?
Seeing beyond the unknown other in folklore by Helen Nde
Wisdom from the Nile : a collection of folk-stories from northern and central Sudan by Ahmed Al-Shahi and F.C.T. Moore
Meanwhile…
The Watkins Book of African Folklore (…or The Mythological Africans Book) is out!
The Watkins Book of African Folklore contains 50 stories, curated from North, South, East, West and Central Africa. The stories are grouped into three sections:
Creation myths and foundation legends (including a river-based version of the foundation legend of the Shilluk people of Sudan!)
Stories about human relationships and the cultural institutions they created
Animal tales (with a twist…the folktales are about some of the most unlikely animals!)
I thoroughly enjoyed digging into the historical and cultural context out of which the stories, their themes, and protagonists emerge. There is something for everybody!
My pronunciation of this word in the episode is up for correction!
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