Research Articles

Unveiling Kianda: a multifaceted symbol in Luanda, Angola

DOI: 10.1080/23323256.2025.2539734
Author(s): Kyeri Kim Hankuk University of Foreign Studies Global Campus, Republic of Korea,

Abstract

This article explores how Kianda, an (un)official urban symbol of Luanda, the capital of Angola, is rooted in the cosmological worldview of residents of Luanda’s Cabo Island (Ilha do Cabo, also known as Ilha de Luanda) and how it has adapted to shifting socio-cultural environments, embodying multiple layers of interpretation. Based on participant observation and in-depth interviews conducted over three periods of fieldwork from 2017 to 2019, the article demonstrates that Kianda is not a fixed or singular symbol, but rather a cultural conglomeration constructed and reconfigured through various historical contexts and everyday practices. The article answers the following questions: How is Kianda understood and represented in the everyday lives of Luanda residents, particularly Cabo Islanders? And how are these interpretations and representations entangled with the legacies of colonialism and with post-independence responses to enduring structures of coloniality? Through addressing these questions, the article situates Kianda as a dynamic cultural resource in Luandan society, one that functions as a site where diverse interpretations and practices intersect, contend, and are continually negotiated. Using ethnographic data, the article reveals the cultural processes of meaning-making and negotiation by tracing how symbolic figures like Kianda are continuously reconfigured within everyday urban life.

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