Film Mende was used extensively in the films
Amistad and
Blood Diamond and was the subject of the documentary film
The Language You Cry In about the connections between the
Gullah people of present-day Georgia and their ancestors from Sierra Leone, beginning with the work of
Lorenzo Dow Turner who documented Gullah memories of the Mende language.
Oral literature In 1908, F.W.H. Migeod, a British civil servant, published
The Mende Language, which contains 17 stories in Mende with facing-text English translations, along with 13 Mende songs (lyrics only, no music). Ralph Eberl-Elber, an Austrian ethnologist, published two Mende tales with English translations as he heard them in Sierra Leone in the 1935. The American anthropologist Marion Dusser de Barenne Kilson worked with Mende storytellers in Sierra Leone as a graduate student in 1959 and 1960 (her husband, the political scientist
Martin Kilson, was also conducting research in Sierra Leone at the time). Marion Kilson then returned to Sierra Leone in 1972 for further research and in 1976 she published
Royal Antelope and Spider: West African Mende Tales, which contains 100 Mende folktales in both the original Mende and in English translation. The introduction provides an overview of Mende culture along with detailed information about Mende storytelling traditions. For Mende proverbs in Mende and English translation, see "Some Mεnde Proverbs," an article published by M. Mary Senior in 1947. ==Sample text==