01871nas a2200241 4500000000100000008004100001260003000042653001600072653001200088653001200100653001300112653002000125653001100145100001300156700001400169700001600183700001200199245012400211300001200335490000700347520123200354022004301586 2012 d c07/2012bTaylor & Francis10aEthnography10aleprosy10aNigeria10aProverbs10aSocial networks10aYoruba1 aEbenso B1 aAdeyemi G1 aAdegoke A O1 aEmmel N00aUsing indigenous proverbs to understand social knowledge and attitudes to leprosy among the Yoruba of southwest Nigeria a208-2220 v243 aFollowing a systematic analysis of 23 proverbs obtained from ethnographic research and from literature searches, this article presents the cultural knowledge and attitudes about leprosy in Yorubaland, southwest Nigeria. Our analysis indicates that contrary to fragmentary evidence portraying Yoruba attitudes to leprosy as entirely negative, there is a mixed pattern of social responses to leprosy which range from drastic exclusion to empathy and acceptance of people affected by leprosy. We show that there is sufficient evidence to demonstrate that leprosy related proverbs are used both as channels of social control and as mediums of knowledge production about leprosy. The fact that social interactions are saturated with metaphorical language in Yoruba culture makes the analysis of proverbs a valuable tool for identifying aspects of social discourse that influence stigmatization of disabled people. An interesting discovery of this research is that modern technology and social networking sites such as Facebook provide a new forum for the dissemination and preservation of proverbs and this article shows that proverbs are not part of an unchanging past but instead part of contemporary understandings of the world.  a1369-6815 (Print), 1469-9346 (Online)