Ààlè Signs and Uses: A Documentation Study
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Keywords

Ààlè
animistic belief
non-verbal communication
semiotics
iconography
communal knowledge
supernatural sanction
cosmology

Abstract

This research documents and analyzes ààlè, a traditional Yorùbá non-verbal communicative system used primarily as a deterrent against theft, trespass, and malevolent intentions. Situated within the broader framework of indigenous semiotics and iconographic communication, the research examines the forms, meanings, and cultural logic underlying ààlè practices in selected Yoruba communities. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, audiovisual documentation, and interviews with users of ààlè, the study reveals that ààlè operates as a culturally encoded warning system that invokes both communal knowledge and supernatural sanction. In ààlè, materials such as red cloth, corncobs, palm fronds, bottomless baskets, and botanical symbols function as visual texts whose meanings are anchored in Yorùbá cosmology, animistic belief, and color symbolism. Beyond its anti-theft function, ààlè also serves as a protective device against verbalized evil and evil intentions. The study further highlights contemporary adaptations of ààlè, including written warnings and the extension of ààlè to domestic animals.

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https://doi.org/10.32473/ysr.11.1.141491
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