Drink, power, and cultural change: a social history of alcohol in Ghana, c. 1800 to recent timesDrink, Power, and Cultural Changepresents a social history of alcohol in southern Ghana over the past century and a half and highlights its centrality in the culture of power. Alcohol could bridge the gap between the spiritual and living worlds, as the blessings of the gods and ancestors were necessary for success. This made alcohol an indispensable fluid, access to which was highly contested. Liquor revenues were critical for British colonialism, while protests against liquor regulations formed a significant part of local politics and drinking bars were hotbeds of nationalist agitation. Akyeampong's innovative analysis blends the disciplinary approaches of history, anthropology, social medicine, theology, and political science. A wide variety of sources forms the basis of his study, including proverbs, highlife music, comic opera, popular literature, and photographs in addition to the more familiar colonial and missionary archives and oral tradition. Drink, Power, and Cultural Changepresents a novel lens through which to examine African social history, and its concern with questions of ritual, gender, power, and health gives it a very broad appeal. |
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Innhold
Alcohol Autonomy and Power in Ghana | 1 |
Alcohol Ritual and Power among the Akan GaAdangme | 21 |
Statue in Kumasi of an elder pouring libation cover | 24 |
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Drink, Power, and Cultural Change: A Social History of Alcohol in Ghana, C ... Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 1993 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Accra Akan akonkofo akpeteshie Akyem Abuakwa alcohol alcoholic drinks Allman ancestors Anita Mensah asafo Asante Asantehene Ashanti August August 16 Basel became beer blood British Cape Coast Casely-Hayford century Christian coastal towns cocoa colonial government colonial rule commoners conflict consumption CPP government CPP's dance drunkenness economic educated elite European liquor Fante female fluid funerals Ga-Adangme gender Ghanaian Gold Coast government's Governor highlife songs History Ibid illicit distillation illicit gin indigenous influence Interview Kofi Krobo Kumasi Kwame Kwame Nkrumah labor libation liquor policy liquor revenues liquor traffic Lodge London male elders marriage McCaskie migrants missionary Nana Nkrumah Obuasi palm wine party police political popular culture precolonial prohibition Rattray reflected Religion retail riots rites ritual rural Sekondi Sekondi-Takoradi social drinking southern Ghana stool struggle Takoradi temperance movement temperance society Templars tion traditional UGCC urban workers wealth West Africa Winnebah women young