In this sense, the
historical figure of Shango is that of the unpopular tyrant, condemned to
suicide for his excesses; which he must undertake by the hand of his wife —with
her as nature—, given its own scope as a political expression. This would not
be a symbol of moral value —as from historical transcendentalism— but an
existential dynamic; by which in its realization, as a political expression,
the human being cannot overcome his individuality; and acts according to his
interests, first individual and therefore as a class, corrupting that
transcendentalism.
Like Shangó —but unlike
Oggún— Yemallá is a historical figure, assimilated to the divinity of Olokun;
referring to the end of the age of the Erumales[2],
more conceptual than the Greek cosmogony at the end of the titanic age. As an
example, the personalities associated with Shangó are also associated with
politics, or at least with its pretensions; but they are in themselves tragic
and controversial, tending to the violence and existential frustration of this
realization.
In an explanation of the
example, a primordial myth of Shango explains its tragedy, similar to that of
Heracles; bringing himself the misfortune of his house, with the careless
manipulation of his powers over lightning, causing his madness. Note that, with
Shango as a historical figure founding the political expression of the real,
this is born of water; reproducing the dynamics of the Bantu cosmogony,
although not in a consequential but converging, in parallelism.
In that same function, but symbolic (political) rather than as a efferent, it appears in contemporary literature; in the transcendentalism of the so-called Magical Realism, from Santa Monica de los Venados, Macondo and Nueva Venecia. However, contrary to those previous cases, this space is not an abstraction (Eidos) that culminates the real (Power); but its Potential, to which the real turns in search of its references, which are existential, not political determinations like the former.
[1] . Cf: Rómulo
Lachatañeré, El sistema religioso de los
afrocubanos [Oh, mío Yemallá!], Ed. Ciencias
Sociales, La Habana 2001. // It should be noted that, contrary to Lachatañeré's
mestizo and popular origin, Cuban ethnography is mostly the work of whites of
bourgeois origin.
[2] . Erumale means radiance in the
Yoruba language, explaining the emanationism of this cosmology, with the
erumales coming from the absolutivity of God, while the orishas (Igbamoles)
come from the Igba (güira) formed by Obatalá and Oduduwa.
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