-
1
-
-
0003721679
-
-
New Haven
-
National Archives of Ghana, Kumasi [NAGK], Ashanti Regional Administration Files [ARA]/1286: Report on Native Affairs: Mampong District for Two Quarters Ending the 31 Mar. 1933. It is worth underscoring here the wide-ranging autonomy enjoyed by native authorities in Asante and other parts of the Gold Coast, particularly as it compared to the limited powers allotted to chiefs by colonial authorities in areas with a substantial white settler population and/or a large African migrant labour force. See, for example, R. Rathbone's discussion of the 'remarkably indirect Indirect Rule' which characterized the State Council in colonial Akyem Abuakwa in Murder and Politics in Colonial Ghana (New Haven, 1993), 54-67 and J. Allman, 'Of "spinsters", "concubines" and "wicked women": reflections on gender and social change in colonial Asante', Gender and History, 111 (1991), 179-80. Cf. M. Chanock, Law, Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia (Cambridge, 1985), 25-47 and passim and his 'Making Customary Law : Men, Women, and Courts in Colonial Northern Rhodesia', in M. J. Hay and M. Wright (eds.), African Women and the Law : Historical Perspectives (Boston, 1982), 53-67.
-
(1993)
Murder and Politics in Colonial Ghana
, pp. 54-67
-
-
Abuakwa, A.1
-
2
-
-
7644237395
-
'Of "spinsters", "concubines" and "wicked women": Reflections on gender and social change in colonial Asante
-
National Archives of Ghana, Kumasi [NAGK], Ashanti Regional Administration Files [ARA]/1286: Report on Native Affairs: Mampong District for Two Quarters Ending the 31 Mar. 1933. It is worth underscoring here the wide-ranging autonomy enjoyed by native authorities in Asante and other parts of the Gold Coast, particularly as it compared to the limited powers allotted to chiefs by colonial authorities in areas with a substantial white settler population and/or a large African migrant labour force. See, for example, R. Rathbone's discussion of the 'remarkably indirect Indirect Rule' which characterized the State Council in colonial Akyem Abuakwa in Murder and Politics in Colonial Ghana (New Haven, 1993), 54-67 and J. Allman, 'Of "spinsters", "concubines" and "wicked women": reflections on gender and social change in colonial Asante', Gender and History, 111 (1991), 179-80. Cf. M. Chanock, Law, Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia (Cambridge, 1985), 25-47 and passim and his 'Making Customary Law : Men, Women, and Courts in Colonial Northern Rhodesia', in M. J. Hay and M. Wright (eds.), African Women and the Law : Historical Perspectives (Boston, 1982), 53-67.
-
(1991)
Gender and History
, vol.111
, pp. 179-180
-
-
Allman, J.1
-
3
-
-
85040846918
-
-
Cambridge
-
National Archives of Ghana, Kumasi [NAGK], Ashanti Regional Administration Files [ARA]/1286: Report on Native Affairs: Mampong District for Two Quarters Ending the 31 Mar. 1933. It is worth underscoring here the wide-ranging autonomy enjoyed by native authorities in Asante and other parts of the Gold Coast, particularly as it compared to the limited powers allotted to chiefs by colonial authorities in areas with a substantial white settler population and/or a large African migrant labour force. See, for example, R. Rathbone's discussion of the 'remarkably indirect Indirect Rule' which characterized the State Council in colonial Akyem Abuakwa in Murder and Politics in Colonial Ghana (New Haven, 1993), 54-67 and J. Allman, 'Of "spinsters", "concubines" and "wicked women": reflections on gender and social change in colonial Asante', Gender and History, 111 (1991), 179-80. Cf. M. Chanock, Law, Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia (Cambridge, 1985), 25-47 and passim and his 'Making Customary Law : Men, Women, and Courts in Colonial Northern Rhodesia', in M. J. Hay and M. Wright (eds.), African Women and the Law : Historical Perspectives (Boston, 1982), 53-67.
-
(1985)
Law, Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia
, pp. 25-47
-
-
Chanock, M.1
-
4
-
-
0002771529
-
Making Customary Law : Men, Women, and Courts in Colonial Northern Rhodesia
-
Boston
-
National Archives of Ghana, Kumasi [NAGK], Ashanti Regional Administration Files [ARA]/1286: Report on Native Affairs: Mampong District for Two Quarters Ending the 31 Mar. 1933. It is worth underscoring here the wide-ranging autonomy enjoyed by native authorities in Asante and other parts of the Gold Coast, particularly as it compared to the limited powers allotted to chiefs by colonial authorities in areas with a substantial white settler population and/or a large African migrant labour force. See, for example, R. Rathbone's discussion of the 'remarkably indirect Indirect Rule' which characterized the State Council in colonial Akyem Abuakwa in Murder and Politics in Colonial Ghana (New Haven, 1993), 54-67 and J. Allman, 'Of "spinsters", "concubines" and "wicked women": reflections on gender and social change in colonial Asante', Gender and History, 111 (1991), 179-80. Cf. M. Chanock, Law, Custom and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia (Cambridge, 1985), 25-47 and passim and his 'Making Customary Law : Men, Women, and Courts in Colonial Northern Rhodesia', in M. J. Hay and M. Wright (eds.), African Women and the Law : Historical Perspectives (Boston, 1982), 53-67.
-
(1982)
African Women and the Law : Historical Perspectives
, pp. 53-67
-
-
Hay, M.J.1
Wright, M.2
-
5
-
-
7644220835
-
-
note
-
To date, I have found written evidence of arrests occurring in the Asante towns of Adansi, Asokore, Bekwai, Edweso, Effiduasi and Mansu Nkwanta.
-
-
-
-
6
-
-
7644228543
-
-
note
-
J. Allman, interview with Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993. (Hereafter interviews are cited by name, town and date only.) Most of the interviews referenced below were conducted by the author with the very able assistance of N. O. Agyeman-Duah. Ivor Agyeman-Duah and Selina Opoku-Agyeman assisted with some of the 1993 interviews. At present, all transcripts of interviews are in the author's possession. They will be deposited in the Melville J. Herskovits Library, Northwestern University, after completion of the broader project.
-
-
-
-
7
-
-
0002495618
-
-
Basel
-
Christaller defines osigyani (pi. asigyafo), as 'an unmarried person, i.e. a man or woman who has either not been married at all, or a man who has sent away his wife, or a woman who has forsaken her husband, in general one who is not in the state of regular marriage'. See J. G. Christaller, Dictionary of the Asante and Fante Language Called Tshi (Basel, 1933), 456.
-
(1933)
Dictionary of the Asante and Fante Language Called Tshi
, pp. 456
-
-
Christaller, J.G.1
-
8
-
-
7644228542
-
-
See NAGK/ARA 1907: Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti to Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Kumasi, 19 July 1932; District Commissioner, Bekwai to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Bekwaihene to District Officer, Bekwai, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Mansu Nkwantahene to District Commissioner, Bekwai, dd. Mansu Nkwanta, 26 July 1932; Chief Commissioner to Assistant Chief Commissioner, dd. 18 July 1932. The fees involved in these arrests, though not exorbitant, were not inconsequential. As Rathbone indicates for the 1930s, a blacksmith earned roughly 3s per day, while a day-labourer earned about 1s 6d. One yam could cost as much as 1s and six plantains about 1d. Rathbone, Murder, 19, n. 50 and N. A. Cox-George, Studies in Finance and Development: The Gold Coast (Ghana) Experience, 1914-1950 (London, 1973), 79. For discussions of the variety of marriage rites in Asante during the colonial period, see R. S. Rattray, Ashanti Law and Constitution (Oxford, 1929), 22-31 and Religion and Art in Ashanti (Oxford, 1927), 76-86. See, also, M. Fortes, 'Kinship and marriage among the Ashanti', in A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde (eds.), African Systems of Kinship and Marriage (London, 1950), 278-83.
-
Murder
, vol.19
, Issue.50
-
-
Rathbone1
-
9
-
-
84963393062
-
-
London
-
See NAGK/ARA 1907: Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti to Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Kumasi, 19 July 1932; District Commissioner, Bekwai to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Bekwaihene to District Officer, Bekwai, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Mansu Nkwantahene to District Commissioner, Bekwai, dd. Mansu Nkwanta, 26 July 1932; Chief Commissioner to Assistant Chief Commissioner, dd. 18 July 1932. The fees involved in these arrests, though not exorbitant, were not inconsequential. As Rathbone indicates for the 1930s, a blacksmith earned roughly 3s per day, while a day-labourer earned about 1s 6d. One yam could cost as much as 1s and six plantains about 1d. Rathbone, Murder, 19, n. 50 and N. A. Cox-George, Studies in Finance and Development: The Gold Coast (Ghana) Experience, 1914-1950 (London, 1973), 79. For discussions of the variety of marriage rites in Asante during the colonial period, see R. S. Rattray, Ashanti Law and Constitution (Oxford, 1929), 22-31 and Religion and Art in Ashanti (Oxford, 1927), 76-86. See, also, M. Fortes, 'Kinship and marriage among the Ashanti', in A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde (eds.), African Systems of Kinship and Marriage (London, 1950), 278-83.
-
(1973)
Studies in Finance and Development: the Gold Coast (Ghana) Experience, 1914-1950
, pp. 79
-
-
Cox-George, N.A.1
-
10
-
-
0004244115
-
-
Oxford
-
See NAGK/ARA 1907: Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti to Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Kumasi, 19 July 1932; District Commissioner, Bekwai to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Bekwaihene to District Officer, Bekwai, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Mansu Nkwantahene to District Commissioner, Bekwai, dd. Mansu Nkwanta, 26 July 1932; Chief Commissioner to Assistant Chief Commissioner, dd. 18 July 1932. The fees involved in these arrests, though not exorbitant, were not inconsequential. As Rathbone indicates for the 1930s, a blacksmith earned roughly 3s per day, while a day-labourer earned about 1s 6d. One yam could cost as much as 1s and six plantains about 1d. Rathbone, Murder, 19, n. 50 and N. A. Cox-George, Studies in Finance and Development: The Gold Coast (Ghana) Experience, 1914-1950 (London, 1973), 79. For discussions of the variety of marriage rites in Asante during the colonial period, see R. S. Rattray, Ashanti Law and Constitution (Oxford, 1929), 22-31 and Religion and Art in Ashanti (Oxford, 1927), 76-86. See, also, M. Fortes, 'Kinship and marriage among the Ashanti', in A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde (eds.), African Systems of Kinship and Marriage (London, 1950), 278-83.
-
(1929)
Ashanti Law and Constitution
, pp. 22-31
-
-
Rattray, R.S.1
-
11
-
-
0003891044
-
-
Oxford
-
See NAGK/ARA 1907: Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti to Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Kumasi, 19 July 1932; District Commissioner, Bekwai to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Bekwaihene to District Officer, Bekwai, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Mansu Nkwantahene to District Commissioner, Bekwai, dd. Mansu Nkwanta, 26 July 1932; Chief Commissioner to Assistant Chief Commissioner, dd. 18 July 1932. The fees involved in these arrests, though not exorbitant, were not inconsequential. As Rathbone indicates for the 1930s, a blacksmith earned roughly 3s per day, while a day-labourer earned about 1s 6d. One yam could cost as much as 1s and six plantains about 1d. Rathbone, Murder, 19, n. 50 and N. A. Cox-George, Studies in Finance and Development: The Gold Coast (Ghana) Experience, 1914-1950 (London, 1973), 79. For discussions of the variety of marriage rites in Asante during the colonial period, see R. S. Rattray, Ashanti Law and Constitution (Oxford, 1929), 22-31 and Religion and Art in Ashanti (Oxford, 1927), 76-86. See, also, M. Fortes, 'Kinship and marriage among the Ashanti', in A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde (eds.), African Systems of Kinship and Marriage (London, 1950), 278-83.
-
(1927)
Religion and Art in Ashanti
, pp. 76-86
-
-
-
12
-
-
0002157322
-
Kinship and marriage among the Ashanti
-
A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde (eds.), London
-
See NAGK/ARA 1907: Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti to Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Kumasi, 19 July 1932; District Commissioner, Bekwai to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Bekwaihene to District Officer, Bekwai, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932; Mansu Nkwantahene to District Commissioner, Bekwai, dd. Mansu Nkwanta, 26 July 1932; Chief Commissioner to Assistant Chief Commissioner, dd. 18 July 1932. The fees involved in these arrests, though not exorbitant, were not inconsequential. As Rathbone indicates for the 1930s, a blacksmith earned roughly 3s per day, while a day-labourer earned about 1s 6d. One yam could cost as much as 1s and six plantains about 1d. Rathbone, Murder, 19, n. 50 and N. A. Cox-George, Studies in Finance and Development: The Gold Coast (Ghana) Experience, 1914-1950 (London, 1973), 79. For discussions of the variety of marriage rites in Asante during the colonial period, see R. S. Rattray, Ashanti Law and Constitution (Oxford, 1929), 22-31 and Religion and Art in Ashanti (Oxford, 1927), 76-86. See, also, M. Fortes, 'Kinship and marriage among the Ashanti', in A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde (eds.), African Systems of Kinship and Marriage (London, 1950), 278-83.
-
(1950)
African Systems of Kinship and Marriage
, pp. 278-283
-
-
Fortes, M.1
-
13
-
-
7644236246
-
-
Meyer Fortes Papers, 'Marriage prestations', [no date], Centre for African Studies, Cambridge University. Unfortunately, Fortes gave no indication of the sources upon which his description is based. This makes it particularly difficult, for example, to ascertain how much the fees involved in 'captured spinster' marriages differed from those paid in other circumstances. Rattray wrote in the 1920s that the tiri aseda (money and wine payments) marking the marriage of commoners was usually 1os, with an additional 6d for rum or wine. Fortes, presumably with reference to the 1940s, remarked that tiri nsa (as aseda was increasingly termed) 'was said to have been as much as £3 at one time, but in most of the descriptions spirits and a few shillings are referred to'. Fortes, 'Marriage prestations', and Rattray, Religion, 81.
-
Marriage Prestations
-
-
Fortes1
-
14
-
-
84893751755
-
-
Meyer Fortes Papers, 'Marriage prestations', [no date], Centre for African Studies, Cambridge University. Unfortunately, Fortes gave no indication of the sources upon which his description is based. This makes it particularly difficult, for example, to ascertain how much the fees involved in 'captured spinster' marriages differed from those paid in other circumstances. Rattray wrote in the 1920s that the tiri aseda (money and wine payments) marking the marriage of commoners was usually 1os, with an additional 6d for rum or wine. Fortes, presumably with reference to the 1940s, remarked that tiri nsa (as aseda was increasingly termed) 'was said to have been as much as £3 at one time, but in most of the descriptions spirits and a few shillings are referred to'. Fortes, 'Marriage prestations', and Rattray, Religion, 81.
-
Religion
, pp. 81
-
-
Rattray1
-
15
-
-
12944263134
-
Who is a wife?
-
Christine Oppong (ed.), London
-
D. D. Vellenga, 'Who is a wife?' in Christine Oppong (ed.), Female and Male in West Africa (London, 1983), 150. Vellenga's reference was a sub-file in the 'Ghanaian archives' entitled, 'Forced marriage of African girls, prevention of, 12 June 1939' and a letter to the editor, Gold Coast Independent, 15 Jan. 1930. Unfortunately, Vellenga did not name the archive in which the sub-file was located and I have not come across it in the national archive collections in Accra or in Kumasi.
-
(1983)
Female and Male in West Africa
, pp. 150
-
-
Vellenga, D.D.1
-
16
-
-
7644237396
-
-
15 Jan.
-
D. D. Vellenga, 'Who is a wife?' in Christine Oppong (ed.), Female and Male in West Africa (London, 1983), 150. Vellenga's reference was a sub-file in the 'Ghanaian archives' entitled, 'Forced marriage of African girls, prevention of, 12 June 1939' and a letter to the editor, Gold Coast Independent, 15 Jan. 1930. Unfortunately, Vellenga did not name the archive in which the sub-file was located and I have not come across it in the national archive collections in Accra or in Kumasi.
-
(1930)
Gold Coast Independent
-
-
-
17
-
-
0009887141
-
The State and the regulation of marriage: Sefwi Wiawso (Ghana), 1900-40
-
H. Afshar (ed.), Binghamton
-
P. A. Roberts, 'The State and the regulation of marriage: Sefwi Wiawso (Ghana), 1900-40', in H. Afshar (ed.), Women, State, and Ideology : Studies from Africa and Asia (Binghamton, 1987), 61. Roberts' pioneering work on gender, colonialism and indirect rule in Sefwi Wiawso has shaped the discussion which follows here in profound ways.
-
(1987)
Women, State, and Ideology : Studies from Africa and Asia
, pp. 61
-
-
Roberts, P.A.1
-
19
-
-
7644233967
-
-
note
-
Professor Kofi Glover, University of South Florida, recently informed me of a 1950s incident in Nyageo, Volta Region, which bears striking similarities to the cases cited here. Unfortunately, I have no further information on this episode.
-
-
-
-
20
-
-
0020868615
-
Rank and wealth among the Akan
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1983)
Africa
, vol.53
, pp. 2-22
-
-
Arhin, K.1
-
21
-
-
0040292017
-
-
Lawrence, KS
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1978)
Asante before the British
-
-
Lewin1
-
22
-
-
0020641788
-
Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1983)
Africa
, vol.53
, pp. 23-43
-
-
McCaskie, T.C.1
-
23
-
-
84928094769
-
Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": An essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1984)
J. Afr. Hist.
, vol.25
, pp. 169-188
-
-
-
24
-
-
0040284484
-
-
Cambridge
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1995)
State and Society in Precolonial Asante
-
-
-
25
-
-
6144223678
-
The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery
-
New York
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1987)
Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History
, vol.65
-
-
Schildkrout, E.1
-
26
-
-
0003891299
-
-
Cambridge
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1975)
Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order
-
-
Wilks, I.1
-
27
-
-
0003786329
-
-
Athens, OH
-
A comprehensive listing of pre-colonial sources is obviously not possible here. A representative sample for the nineteenth century might include : K. Arhin, 'Rank and wealth among the Akan', Africa, LIII (1983), 2-22; Lewin, Asante Before the British (Lawrence, KS, 1978); T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history', Africa, LIII (1983), 23-43; 'Ahyiamu - "A place of meeting": an essay on process and event in the history of the Asante State', J. Afr. Hist., XXV (1984), 169-88; State and Society in Precolonial Asante (Cambridge, 1995); E. Schildkrout (ed.), The Golden Stool : Studies of the Asante Center and Periphery, vol. LXV of the Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, 1987); I. Wilks, Asante in the Nineteenth Century : The Structure and Evolution of a Political Order (Cambridge, 1975); Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante (Athens, OH, 1993).
-
(1993)
Forests of Gold : Essays on the Akan and the Kingdom of Asante
-
-
-
28
-
-
21544483141
-
Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history, II: The twentieth century
-
T. C. McCaskie, 'Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history, II: the twentieth century', Africa, LVI (1986), 2 and n. 14.
-
(1986)
Africa
, vol.56
, Issue.14
, pp. 2
-
-
McCaskie, T.C.1
-
29
-
-
0003459895
-
-
New York
-
am not alone in associating 'chaos' with 'cocoa'. G. Mikell has used 'chaos' to describe the broader economic, political and social turmoil associated with the spread of cocoa production throughout Ghana in her book, Cocoa and Chaos in Ghana (New York, 1989). That Mikell and I came to use the term independently may underscore its appropriateness for highlighting the general disorder of this era. (It may also simply reflect a shared fondness for alliteration.) Certainly, my use of 'chaos' here is more circumscribed that Mikell's, for it is meant to capture the specific disorder in gender relations that occurred in Asante as a result of the expanding cash economy. Finally, it is worth noting here the fascinating body of literature on 'chaos' and history which seeks to apply the mathematical theory of chaos ('the science of physical systems governed by nonlinear dynamical laws') to historical narrative. See, for example, G. Reisch, 'Chaos, history, and narrative', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 1-20; D. N. McCloskey, 'History, differential equations, and the problem of narration', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 21-36; 'Forum: chaos theory and history revisited', History and Theory, XXXIV (1995). 30-89. This paper makes no pretence of contributing to the development of this theoretical model, though the literature has convinced me of the appropriateness of using 'chaos' to describe this particular moment in Asante's gendered past.
-
(1989)
Cocoa and Chaos in Ghana
-
-
-
30
-
-
84894742948
-
Chaos, history, and narrative
-
am not alone in associating 'chaos' with 'cocoa'. G. Mikell has used 'chaos' to describe the broader economic, political and social turmoil associated with the spread of cocoa production throughout Ghana in her book, Cocoa and Chaos in Ghana (New York, 1989). That Mikell and I came to use the term independently may underscore its appropriateness for highlighting the general disorder of this era. (It may also simply reflect a shared fondness for alliteration.) Certainly, my use of 'chaos' here is more circumscribed that Mikell's, for it is meant to capture the specific disorder in gender relations that occurred in Asante as a result of the expanding cash economy. Finally, it is worth noting here the fascinating body of literature on 'chaos' and history which seeks to apply the mathematical theory of chaos ('the science of physical systems governed by nonlinear dynamical laws') to historical narrative. See, for example, G. Reisch, 'Chaos, history, and narrative', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 1-20; D. N. McCloskey, 'History, differential equations, and the problem of narration', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 21-36; 'Forum: chaos theory and history revisited', History and Theory, XXXIV (1995). 30-89. This paper makes no pretence of contributing to the development of this theoretical model, though the literature has convinced me of the appropriateness of using 'chaos' to describe this particular moment in Asante's gendered past.
-
(1991)
History and Theory
, vol.30
, pp. 1-20
-
-
Reisch, G.1
-
31
-
-
0002333522
-
History, differential equations, and the problem of narration
-
am not alone in associating 'chaos' with 'cocoa'. G. Mikell has used 'chaos' to describe the broader economic, political and social turmoil associated with the spread of cocoa production throughout Ghana in her book, Cocoa and Chaos in Ghana (New York, 1989). That Mikell and I came to use the term independently may underscore its appropriateness for highlighting the general disorder of this era. (It may also simply reflect a shared fondness for alliteration.) Certainly, my use of 'chaos' here is more circumscribed that Mikell's, for it is meant to capture the specific disorder in gender relations that occurred in Asante as a result of the expanding cash economy. Finally, it is worth noting here the fascinating body of literature on 'chaos' and history which seeks to apply the mathematical theory of chaos ('the science of physical systems governed by nonlinear dynamical laws') to historical narrative. See, for example, G. Reisch, 'Chaos, history, and narrative', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 1-20; D. N. McCloskey, 'History, differential equations, and the problem of narration', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 21-36; 'Forum: chaos theory and history revisited', History and Theory, XXXIV (1995). 30-89. This paper makes no pretence of contributing to the development of this theoretical model, though the literature has convinced me of the appropriateness of using 'chaos' to describe this particular moment in Asante's gendered past.
-
(1991)
History and Theory
, vol.30
, pp. 21-36
-
-
McCloskey, D.N.1
-
32
-
-
7644221391
-
Forum: Chaos theory and history revisited
-
am not alone in associating 'chaos' with 'cocoa'. G. Mikell has used 'chaos' to describe the broader economic, political and social turmoil associated with the spread of cocoa production throughout Ghana in her book, Cocoa and Chaos in Ghana (New York, 1989). That Mikell and I came to use the term independently may underscore its appropriateness for highlighting the general disorder of this era. (It may also simply reflect a shared fondness for alliteration.) Certainly, my use of 'chaos' here is more circumscribed that Mikell's, for it is meant to capture the specific disorder in gender relations that occurred in Asante as a result of the expanding cash economy. Finally, it is worth noting here the fascinating body of literature on 'chaos' and history which seeks to apply the mathematical theory of chaos ('the science of physical systems governed by nonlinear dynamical laws') to historical narrative. See, for example, G. Reisch, 'Chaos, history, and narrative', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 1-20; D. N. McCloskey, 'History, differential equations, and the problem of narration', History and Theory, XXX (1991), 21-36; 'Forum: chaos theory and history revisited', History and Theory, XXXIV (1995). 30-89. This paper makes no pretence of contributing to the development of this theoretical model, though the literature has convinced me of the appropriateness of using 'chaos' to describe this particular moment in Asante's gendered past.
-
(1995)
History and Theory
, vol.34
, pp. 30-89
-
-
-
33
-
-
7644238283
-
-
note
-
NAGK/ARA 1907: Chief Commissioner, Ashanti to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Kumasi, 18 July 1932.
-
-
-
-
34
-
-
7644232297
-
-
note
-
NAGK/ARA 1907: District Commissioner, Bekwai to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932.
-
-
-
-
35
-
-
7644240022
-
-
note
-
The Mansu Nkwantahene reported that 'the object of beaten gong-gong is to prevent venereal diseases and etc. prevalent within the Division'. NAGK/ARA 1907: Mansu Nkwantahene to District Commissioner, Bekwai, dd. Mansu Nkwanta, 26 July 1932.
-
-
-
-
36
-
-
7644243477
-
-
note
-
While the chiefs spoke of a new tendency for women not to marry, it is virtually impossible to ascertain, via quantitative data, whether it was actually the case that women were not marrying at rates far greater than before. Unfortunately, sources simply are not available to judge whether the chiefs' fears were well grounded or simply articulated a general concern over women's 'uncontrollability' during this period.
-
-
-
-
37
-
-
7644227790
-
-
note
-
NAGK/ARA 1907: Bekwaihene to District Officer, Bekwai, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 132.
-
-
-
-
38
-
-
7644220568
-
-
Ibid.
-
Ibid.
-
-
-
-
39
-
-
7644238560
-
-
note
-
NAGK/ARA 1907: District Commissioner, Bekwai to Assistant Chief Commissioner, Ashanti, dd. Bekwai, 23 July 1932. It is worth noting that during this same period numerous Asante chiefs faced destoolment charges, often for impotence or sterility. Included among them was the chief responsible for the founding up of unmarried women in Effiduase, Kwame Owusu. See Manhyia Record Office: 'Mampong native affairs', Queen Mother, Kwami Asreh and Loyal Elders to DC Mampong, dd. 15 May 1931. (I am grateful to T. C. McCaskie for this reference.) It is, of course, exceedingly difficult to ascertain whether there was any direct connection between the destoolment charges and the actions taken against unmarried women in the town.
-
-
-
-
40
-
-
7644220012
-
-
Fortes Papers, Kwaku Afram v. Afuah Buo, Native Tribunal of Asokore, 13 Aug. 1929, mimeo
-
Fortes Papers, Kwaku Afram v. Afuah Buo, Native Tribunal of Asokore, 13 Aug. 1929, mimeo.
-
-
-
-
41
-
-
7644220271
-
-
Vellenga, 'Who is a wife?', 145. M. Lovett has discussed the fluidity of marriage arrangements in the urban townships of the Copperbelt during the same period, noting how these arrangements 'posed an especially powerful threat to the authority of the elders and to the maintenance of rural social relations. They also increased women's autonomy'. See, M. Lovett, 'Gender relations, class formation and the colonial state', in J. Parpart and K. Staudt (eds.), Women and the State in Africa (Boulder, 1989), 31. For a fascinating discussion of the dynamics of marriage in Asante today, see Gracia Clark, Onions Are My Husband : Survival and Accumulation by West African Market Women (Chicago, 1994), ch. 9, but esp. 344-8.
-
Who Is a Wife?
, pp. 145
-
-
Vellenga1
-
42
-
-
0002513656
-
Gender relations, class formation and the colonial state
-
J. Parpart and K. Staudt (eds.), Boulder
-
Vellenga, 'Who is a wife?', 145. M. Lovett has discussed the fluidity of marriage arrangements in the urban townships of the Copperbelt during the same period, noting how these arrangements 'posed an especially powerful threat to the authority of the elders and to the maintenance of rural social relations. They also increased women's autonomy'. See, M. Lovett, 'Gender relations, class formation and the colonial state', in J. Parpart and K. Staudt (eds.), Women and the State in Africa (Boulder, 1989), 31. For a fascinating discussion of the dynamics of marriage in Asante today, see Gracia Clark, Onions Are My Husband : Survival and Accumulation by West African Market Women (Chicago, 1994), ch. 9, but esp. 344-8.
-
(1989)
Women and the State in Africa
, pp. 31
-
-
Lovett, M.1
-
43
-
-
0003504357
-
-
Chicago, ch. 9, but esp. 344-8
-
Vellenga, 'Who is a wife?', 145. M. Lovett has discussed the fluidity of marriage arrangements in the urban townships of the Copperbelt during the same period, noting how these arrangements 'posed an especially powerful threat to the authority of the elders and to the maintenance of rural social relations. They also increased women's autonomy'. See, M. Lovett, 'Gender relations, class formation and the colonial state', in J. Parpart and K. Staudt (eds.), Women and the State in Africa (Boulder, 1989), 31. For a fascinating discussion of the dynamics of marriage in Asante today, see Gracia Clark, Onions Are My Husband : Survival and Accumulation by West African Market Women (Chicago, 1994), ch. 9, but esp. 344-8.
-
(1994)
Onions Are My Husband : Survival and Accumulation by West African Market Women
-
-
Clark, G.1
-
44
-
-
84971921074
-
State and society, marriage and adultery : Same considerations towards a social history of pre-colonial Asante
-
T. C. McCaskie set the parameters of the discussion for the nineteenth century in his 'State and society, marriage and adultery : same considerations towards a social history of pre-colonial Asante', J. Afr. Hist., XXII (1981), 477-94. Recently, Clark's Onions and T. E. Kyei's Marriage and Divorce Among the Asante : A Study Undertaken in the Course of the 'Ashanti Social Survey (1945)' (Cambridge, 1992) have made important contributions to our understanding of marriage in colonial and in present-day Asante. Finally, many of the specific questions raised by this paper promise to be addressed in V. Tashjian, 'It's mine and it's ours are not the same thing: a history of marriage in rural Asante, 1900-1957' (Ph.D. thesis, Northwestern University, 1995).
-
(1981)
J. Afr. Hist.
, vol.22
, pp. 477-494
-
-
-
45
-
-
7644241768
-
-
T. C. McCaskie set the parameters of the discussion for the nineteenth century in his 'State and society, marriage and adultery : same considerations towards a social history of pre-colonial Asante', J. Afr. Hist., XXII (1981), 477-94. Recently, Clark's Onions and T. E. Kyei's Marriage and Divorce Among the Asante : A Study Undertaken in the Course of the 'Ashanti Social Survey (1945)' (Cambridge, 1992) have made important contributions to our understanding of marriage in colonial and in present-day Asante. Finally, many of the specific questions raised by this paper promise to be addressed in V. Tashjian, 'It's mine and it's ours are not the same thing: a history of marriage in rural Asante, 1900-1957' (Ph.D. thesis, Northwestern University, 1995).
-
Onions
-
-
Clark1
-
46
-
-
0009887655
-
-
Cambridge
-
T. C. McCaskie set the parameters of the discussion for the nineteenth century in his 'State and society, marriage and adultery : same considerations towards a social history of pre-colonial Asante', J. Afr. Hist., XXII (1981), 477-94. Recently, Clark's Onions and T. E. Kyei's Marriage and Divorce Among the Asante : A Study Undertaken in the Course of the 'Ashanti Social Survey (1945)' (Cambridge, 1992) have made important contributions to our understanding of marriage in colonial and in present-day Asante. Finally, many of the specific questions raised by this paper promise to be addressed in V. Tashjian, 'It's mine and it's ours are not the same thing: a history of marriage in rural Asante, 1900-1957' (Ph.D. thesis, Northwestern University, 1995).
-
(1992)
Marriage and Divorce among the Asante : A Study Undertaken in the Course of the 'Ashanti Social Survey (1945)'
-
-
Kyei, T.E.1
-
47
-
-
0009942925
-
-
Ph.D. thesis, Northwestern University
-
T. C. McCaskie set the parameters of the discussion for the nineteenth century in his 'State and society, marriage and adultery : same considerations towards a social history of pre-colonial Asante', J. Afr. Hist., XXII (1981), 477-94. Recently, Clark's Onions and T. E. Kyei's Marriage and Divorce Among the Asante : A Study Undertaken in the Course of the 'Ashanti Social Survey (1945)' (Cambridge, 1992) have made important contributions to our understanding of marriage in colonial and in present-day Asante. Finally, many of the specific questions raised by this paper promise to be addressed in V. Tashjian, 'It's mine and it's ours are not the same thing: a history of marriage in rural Asante, 1900-1957' (Ph.D. thesis, Northwestern University, 1995).
-
(1995)
It's Mine and It's Ours Are Not the Same Thing: A History of Marriage in Rural Asante, 1900-1957
-
-
Tashjian, V.1
-
48
-
-
7644229761
-
Rattray
-
Rattray, Ashanti Law, 26 and Fortes, 'Kinship', 280. The wealth of cases heard by Asante's Native Tribunals and Courts provide ample material for probing changing views of marriage during this period. Many of these records are held at the Manhyia Record Office, Kumasi. See, for example, Asantehene's Appam Court D, Civil Record Book 3, Kwaku Boaki v. Yaa Mansah, 23 Dec. 1935, 370; Gyasehene's Native Tribunal, Civil Record Book 1, Yaw Buoh v. Atta Ya, 12 Mar. 1928, 124 and Asantehene's Native Court B, Civil Record Book 20, Ama Manu v. Kwasi Buo, 25 Sept. 1940, 180, See, also, J. Allman, 'Adultery and the State in Asante: reflections on gender, class and power from 1800 to 1950', in J. O. Hunwick and N. Lawler (eds.), The Cloth of Many Colored Silks : Papers on History and Society (Evanston, forthcoming).
-
Ashanti Law
, pp. 26
-
-
-
49
-
-
33444465941
-
-
Rattray, Ashanti Law, 26 and Fortes, 'Kinship', 280. The wealth of cases heard by Asante's Native Tribunals and Courts provide ample material for probing changing views of marriage during this period. Many of these records are held at the Manhyia Record Office, Kumasi. See, for example, Asantehene's Appam Court D, Civil Record Book 3, Kwaku Boaki v. Yaa Mansah, 23 Dec. 1935, 370; Gyasehene's Native Tribunal, Civil Record Book 1, Yaw Buoh v. Atta Ya, 12 Mar. 1928, 124 and Asantehene's Native Court B, Civil Record Book 20, Ama Manu v. Kwasi Buo, 25 Sept. 1940, 180, See, also, J. Allman, 'Adultery and the State in Asante: reflections on gender, class and power from 1800 to 1950', in J. O. Hunwick and N. Lawler (eds.), The Cloth of Many Colored Silks : Papers on History and Society (Evanston, forthcoming).
-
Kinship
, pp. 280
-
-
Fortes1
-
50
-
-
7644224958
-
-
Kwaku Boaki v. Yaa Mansah, 23 Dec. 1935, 370
-
Rattray, Ashanti Law, 26 and Fortes, 'Kinship', 280. The wealth of cases heard by Asante's Native Tribunals and Courts provide ample material for probing changing views of marriage during this period. Many of these records are held at the Manhyia Record Office, Kumasi. See, for example, Asantehene's Appam Court D, Civil Record Book 3, Kwaku Boaki v. Yaa Mansah, 23 Dec. 1935, 370; Gyasehene's Native Tribunal, Civil Record Book 1, Yaw Buoh v. Atta Ya, 12 Mar. 1928, 124 and Asantehene's Native Court B, Civil Record Book 20, Ama Manu v. Kwasi Buo, 25 Sept. 1940, 180, See, also, J. Allman, 'Adultery and the State in Asante: reflections on gender, class and power from 1800 to 1950', in J. O. Hunwick and N. Lawler (eds.), The Cloth of Many Colored Silks : Papers on History and Society (Evanston, forthcoming).
-
Civil Record Book 3
-
-
-
51
-
-
7644241206
-
-
Yaw Buoh v. Atta Ya, 12 Mar. 1928, 124
-
Rattray, Ashanti Law, 26 and Fortes, 'Kinship', 280. The wealth of cases heard by Asante's Native Tribunals and Courts provide ample material for probing changing views of marriage during this period. Many of these records are held at the Manhyia Record Office, Kumasi. See, for example, Asantehene's Appam Court D, Civil Record Book 3, Kwaku Boaki v. Yaa Mansah, 23 Dec. 1935, 370; Gyasehene's Native Tribunal, Civil Record Book 1, Yaw Buoh v. Atta Ya, 12 Mar. 1928, 124 and Asantehene's Native Court B, Civil Record Book 20, Ama Manu v. Kwasi Buo, 25 Sept. 1940, 180, See, also, J. Allman, 'Adultery and the State in Asante: reflections on gender, class and power from 1800 to 1950', in J. O. Hunwick and N. Lawler (eds.), The Cloth of Many Colored Silks : Papers on History and Society (Evanston, forthcoming).
-
Civil Record Book 1
-
-
-
52
-
-
7644236805
-
-
Ama Manu v. Kwasi Buo, 25 Sept. 1940, 180
-
Rattray, Ashanti Law, 26 and Fortes, 'Kinship', 280. The wealth of cases heard by Asante's Native Tribunals and Courts provide ample material for probing changing views of marriage during this period. Many of these records are held at the Manhyia Record Office, Kumasi. See, for example, Asantehene's Appam Court D, Civil Record Book 3, Kwaku Boaki v. Yaa Mansah, 23 Dec. 1935, 370; Gyasehene's Native Tribunal, Civil Record Book 1, Yaw Buoh v. Atta Ya, 12 Mar. 1928, 124 and Asantehene's Native Court B, Civil Record Book 20, Ama Manu v. Kwasi Buo, 25 Sept. 1940, 180, See, also, J. Allman, 'Adultery and the State in Asante: reflections on gender, class and power from 1800 to 1950', in J. O. Hunwick and N. Lawler (eds.), The Cloth of Many Colored Silks : Papers on History and Society (Evanston, forthcoming).
-
Civil Record Book 20
-
-
-
53
-
-
0042900144
-
Adultery and the State in Asante: Reflections on gender, class and power from 1800 to 1950
-
J. O. Hunwick and N. Lawler (eds.), Evanston, forthcoming
-
Rattray, Ashanti Law, 26 and Fortes, 'Kinship', 280. The wealth of cases heard by Asante's Native Tribunals and Courts provide ample material for probing changing views of marriage during this period. Many of these records are held at the Manhyia Record Office, Kumasi. See, for example, Asantehene's Appam Court D, Civil Record Book 3, Kwaku Boaki v. Yaa Mansah, 23 Dec. 1935, 370; Gyasehene's Native Tribunal, Civil Record Book 1, Yaw Buoh v. Atta Ya, 12 Mar. 1928, 124 and Asantehene's Native Court B, Civil Record Book 20, Ama Manu v. Kwasi Buo, 25 Sept. 1940, 180, See, also, J. Allman, 'Adultery and the State in Asante: reflections on gender, class and power from 1800 to 1950', in J. O. Hunwick and N. Lawler (eds.), The Cloth of Many Colored Silks : Papers on History and Society (Evanston, forthcoming).
-
The Cloth of Many Colored Silks : Papers on History and Society
-
-
Allman, J.1
-
54
-
-
7644222224
-
-
note
-
Over the past three years, I have been collecting life histories and reminiscences from older Asante women as part of a broader project on gender and social change in the colonial period. These efforts have focused on the Ashanti Newtown district of Kumasi, on sub-urban Tafo and on the rural towns of Effiduasi and Asokore. While none of the women with whom I spoke in Kumasi and Tafo recalled the capture of unmarried women, many in Effiduasi and Asokore could remember the episode in some detail. Of those, nearly all were willing to talk about it generally or as something that happened to certain other women. In some cases, however, it was fairly obvious that the reminiscences were those of someone who had been captured, even though the story was told in the third person. Because of the stigma attached to being from 'among those caught', however, I did not ask women directly whether they had been arrested or not. Only Eponuahemaa Afua Fom volunteered that information and she did so nearly a year after our first discussions.
-
-
-
-
55
-
-
7644235982
-
-
Akosua Atta (a.k.a. Sarah Obeng), Asokore, 26 Aug. 1992
-
Akosua Atta (a.k.a. Sarah Obeng), Asokore, 26 Aug. 1992.
-
-
-
-
56
-
-
7644221948
-
-
25 Aug.
-
Mary Oduro, Effiduasi, 25 Aug. 1992 and Rosina Boama, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992.
-
(1992)
Effiduasi
-
-
Oduro, M.1
-
57
-
-
7644221948
-
-
24 Aug.
-
Mary Oduro, Effiduasi, 25 Aug. 1992 and Rosina Boama, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992.
-
(1992)
Effiduasi
-
-
Boama, R.1
-
58
-
-
7644221948
-
-
24 Aug.
-
Rosina Boama, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992. Again, we are hampered by the dearth of demographic information for this period. Certainly, no such imbalance appears in the 1948 Census, and the Census for 1921 and for 1931, although admittedly unreliable, in fact suggest that the male population in Asante was growing faster than the female population during this period as a result of immigration from the Northern Territories. See Gold Coast, Census of Population, 1948 (Accra, 1948). For an excellent overview of population trends and census data in Ghana from the mid-nineteenth century to the post-independence era, see E. V. T. Engman, Population of Ghana, 1550-1960 (Accra, 1986), esp. 92 and 100-5 for data on sex ratios. It is far more likely that Boama's assertion of men outnumbering women reflected the fact that young men were delaying marriage longer than they had before. That is, women outnumbered men in terms of availability, if not in statistical terms. Why this may have been the case is open to speculation. Although far more local research is required before any conclusions can be drawn, it is not improbable that, during the late 1920s and early 1930s, young men were finding it far more difficult than their fathers or uncles to enter successfully the colonial cash economy. The Bekwaihene's assertion that men could not afford the marriage payments certainly substantiates such an hypothesis, as does Afua Fom's recollection that 'in those days, the women were able to get money faster than the men'. Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1992)
Effiduasi
-
-
Boama, R.1
-
59
-
-
7644221389
-
-
Accra
-
Rosina Boama, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992. Again, we are hampered by the dearth of demographic information for this period. Certainly, no such imbalance appears in the 1948 Census, and the Census for 1921 and for 1931, although admittedly unreliable, in fact suggest that the male population in Asante was growing faster than the female population during this period as a result of immigration from the Northern Territories. See Gold Coast, Census of Population, 1948 (Accra, 1948). For an excellent overview of population trends and census data in Ghana from the mid-nineteenth century to the post-independence era, see E. V. T. Engman, Population of Ghana, 1550-1960 (Accra, 1986), esp. 92 and 100-5 for data on sex ratios. It is far more likely that Boama's assertion of men outnumbering women reflected the fact that young men were delaying marriage longer than they had before. That is, women outnumbered men in terms of availability, if not in statistical terms. Why this may have been the case is open to speculation. Although far more local research is required before any conclusions can be drawn, it is not improbable that, during the late 1920s and early 1930s, young men were finding it far more difficult than their fathers or uncles to enter successfully the colonial cash economy. The Bekwaihene's assertion that men could not afford the marriage payments certainly substantiates such an hypothesis, as does Afua Fom's recollection that 'in those days, the women were able to get money faster than the men'. Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1948)
Census of Population, 1948
-
-
-
60
-
-
7644221392
-
-
Accra
-
Rosina Boama, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992. Again, we are hampered by the dearth of demographic information for this period. Certainly, no such imbalance appears in the 1948 Census, and the Census for 1921 and for 1931, although admittedly unreliable, in fact suggest that the male population in Asante was growing faster than the female population during this period as a result of immigration from the Northern Territories. See Gold Coast, Census of Population, 1948 (Accra, 1948). For an excellent overview of population trends and census data in Ghana from the mid-nineteenth century to the post-independence era, see E. V. T. Engman, Population of Ghana, 1550-1960 (Accra, 1986), esp. 92 and 100-5 for data on sex ratios. It is far more likely that Boama's assertion of men outnumbering women reflected the fact that young men were delaying marriage longer than they had before. That is, women outnumbered men in terms of availability, if not in statistical terms. Why this may have been the case is open to speculation. Although far more local research is required before any conclusions can be drawn, it is not improbable that, during the late 1920s and early 1930s, young men were finding it far more difficult than their fathers or uncles to enter successfully the colonial cash economy. The Bekwaihene's assertion that men could not afford the marriage payments certainly substantiates such an hypothesis, as does Afua Fom's recollection that 'in those days, the women were able to get money faster than the men'. Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1986)
Population of Ghana, 1550-1960
, pp. 92
-
-
Engman, E.V.T.1
-
61
-
-
7644222767
-
-
30 June
-
Rosina Boama, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992. Again, we are hampered by the dearth of demographic information for this period. Certainly, no such imbalance appears in the 1948 Census, and the Census for 1921 and for 1931, although admittedly unreliable, in fact suggest that the male population in Asante was growing faster than the female population during this period as a result of immigration from the Northern Territories. See Gold Coast, Census of Population, 1948 (Accra, 1948). For an excellent overview of population trends and census data in Ghana from the mid-nineteenth century to the post-independence era, see E. V. T. Engman, Population of Ghana, 1550-1960 (Accra, 1986), esp. 92 and 100-5 for data on sex ratios. It is far more likely that Boama's assertion of men outnumbering women reflected the fact that young men were delaying marriage longer than they had before. That is, women outnumbered men in terms of availability, if not in statistical terms. Why this may have been the case is open to speculation. Although far more local research is required before any conclusions can be drawn, it is not improbable that, during the late 1920s and early 1930s, young men were finding it far more difficult than their fathers or uncles to enter successfully the colonial cash economy. The Bekwaihene's assertion that men could not afford the marriage payments certainly substantiates such an hypothesis, as does Afua Fom's recollection that 'in those days, the women were able to get money faster than the men'. Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1993)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
62
-
-
7644221948
-
-
24 Aug.
-
Beatrice Nyarko, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992; Jean Asare, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1992)
Effiduasi
-
-
Nyarko, B.1
-
63
-
-
7644222767
-
-
30 June
-
Beatrice Nyarko, Effiduasi, 24 Aug. 1992; Jean Asare, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1993)
Effiduasi
-
-
Asare, J.1
-
67
-
-
7644221948
-
-
1 Sept.
-
Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 1 Sept. 1992.
-
(1992)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
68
-
-
7644222767
-
-
30 June
-
It is difficult to retrieve the numbers involved in these arrests. Most of the women whose reminiscences I have recorded talked of 'many' or 'not many'. The written sources provide no statistics. Afua Fom recalled that there were 'maybe sixty ... But there may be more than that because they were going to the farms. The sixty is what I saw. But we were more than sixty because they went far'. I am accepting Fom's figure, for the time being, because she is the only woman I have encountered who has identified herself as among those captured. Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1993)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
70
-
-
7644222767
-
-
30 June
-
Ibid. 30 June 1993. Adwoa subsequently established her own farm on land given to her by her grandfather and reported, 'right now I am enjoying from the fruits of that cocoa farm'.
-
(1993)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
75
-
-
7644228815
-
-
note
-
Certainly, this incident must be understood in the light of broader contest within Asante over the meaning of marriage and the reciprocity of conjugal obligations. See n. 24 above.
-
-
-
-
76
-
-
7644222767
-
-
30 June
-
Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993. I have found no written evidence of this order.
-
(1993)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
79
-
-
7644222767
-
-
30 June
-
Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1993)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
80
-
-
84933495953
-
Pawns, porters and petty traders: Women in the transition to cash crop agriculture in colonial Ghana
-
Obviously, terms like 'prostitute' must be handled quite carefully. When colonial and chiefly concerns over growing numbers of 'prostitutes' - so pervasive in the written documentation - are not situated in a precise social/historical juncture or are not weighed against the testimony of women and/or subordinate men, there is a very real danger of misinterpreting women's agency for women's victimization. For example, see B. Grier, 'Pawns, porters and petty traders: women in the transition to cash crop agriculture in colonial Ghana', Signs, XVII (1992), 322. D. Jeater's recent study, Marriage, Perversion and Power : The Construction of Moral Discourse in Southern Rhodesia, 1894-1930 (Oxford, 1993) underscores the importance of disentangling women's economic agency and independence from moral discourses regarding promiscuity and perversion.
-
(1992)
Signs
, vol.17
, pp. 322
-
-
Grier, B.1
-
81
-
-
0003574056
-
-
Oxford
-
Obviously, terms like 'prostitute' must be handled quite carefully. When colonial and chiefly concerns over growing numbers of 'prostitutes' - so pervasive in the written documentation - are not situated in a precise social/historical juncture or are not weighed against the testimony of women and/or subordinate men, there is a very real danger of misinterpreting women's agency for women's victimization. For example, see B. Grier, 'Pawns, porters and petty traders: women in the transition to cash crop agriculture in colonial Ghana', Signs, XVII (1992), 322. D. Jeater's recent study, Marriage, Perversion and Power : The Construction of Moral Discourse in Southern Rhodesia, 1894-1930 (Oxford, 1993) underscores the importance of disentangling women's economic agency and independence from moral discourses regarding promiscuity and perversion.
-
(1993)
Marriage, Perversion and Power : The Construction of Moral Discourse in Southern Rhodesia, 1894-1930
-
-
Jeater, D.1
-
82
-
-
84972017356
-
Noise over camouflaged polygamy, colonial morality taxation, and a woman-naming crisis in Belgian Africa
-
N. Hunt, 'Noise over camouflaged polygamy, colonial morality taxation, and a woman-naming crisis in Belgian Africa', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1991), 471.
-
(1991)
J. Afr. Hist.
, vol.32
, pp. 471
-
-
Hunt, N.1
-
83
-
-
0003583227
-
-
Stanford
-
M. Vaughan, Curing Their Ills : Colonial Power and African Illness (Stanford, 1991), 144. Jeater's recent work on Southern Rhodesia provides one of the more thorough explorations of 'the problem with women'. See Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-40.
-
(1991)
Curing Their Ills : Colonial Power and African Illness
, pp. 144
-
-
Vaughan, M.1
-
84
-
-
7644223029
-
-
esp. 119-40
-
M. Vaughan, Curing Their Ills : Colonial Power and African Illness (Stanford, 1991), 144. Jeater's recent work on Southern Rhodesia provides one of the more thorough explorations of 'the problem with women'. See Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-40.
-
Marriage
-
-
Jeater1
-
85
-
-
0028503982
-
Making mothers: Missionaries, medical officers and women's work in colonial Asante, 1924-1945
-
An earlier version of the cocoa discussion that follows appears in J. Allman, 'Making mothers: missionaries, medical officers and women's work in colonial Asante, 1924-1945', History Workshop Journal, XXXVIII (1994), 27-9.
-
(1994)
History Workshop Journal
, vol.38
, pp. 27-29
-
-
Allman, J.1
-
86
-
-
84959605134
-
The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33
-
Among the more easily accessible sources are: G. Austin, 'The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1987), 259-79; J. Dunn and A. F. Robertson, Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo (Cambridge, 1973); Grier, 'Pawns', 304-28; P. Hill, The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana (Cambridge, 1963); C. Okali, 'Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana', in Oppong (ed.), Female and Male, 169-78; Mikell, Cocoa; and D. D. Vellenga, 'Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana', in C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), Women and Class in Africa (New York, 1986), 62-77.
-
(1987)
J. Afr. Hist.
, vol.32
, pp. 259-279
-
-
Austin, G.1
-
87
-
-
0005623136
-
-
Cambridge
-
Among the more easily accessible sources are: G. Austin, 'The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1987), 259-79; J. Dunn and A. F. Robertson, Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo (Cambridge, 1973); Grier, 'Pawns', 304-28; P. Hill, The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana (Cambridge, 1963); C. Okali, 'Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana', in Oppong (ed.), Female and Male, 169-78; Mikell, Cocoa; and D. D. Vellenga, 'Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana', in C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), Women and Class in Africa (New York, 1986), 62-77.
-
(1973)
Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo
-
-
Dunn, J.1
Robertson, A.F.2
-
88
-
-
7644230864
-
-
Among the more easily accessible sources are: G. Austin, 'The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1987), 259-79; J. Dunn and A. F. Robertson, Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo (Cambridge, 1973); Grier, 'Pawns', 304-28; P. Hill, The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana (Cambridge, 1963); C. Okali, 'Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana', in Oppong (ed.), Female and Male, 169-78; Mikell, Cocoa; and D. D. Vellenga, 'Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana', in C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), Women and Class in Africa (New York, 1986), 62-77.
-
Pawns
, pp. 304-328
-
-
Grier1
-
89
-
-
0003825626
-
-
Cambridge
-
Among the more easily accessible sources are: G. Austin, 'The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1987), 259-79; J. Dunn and A. F. Robertson, Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo (Cambridge, 1973); Grier, 'Pawns', 304-28; P. Hill, The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana (Cambridge, 1963); C. Okali, 'Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana', in Oppong (ed.), Female and Male, 169-78; Mikell, Cocoa; and D. D. Vellenga, 'Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana', in C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), Women and Class in Africa (New York, 1986), 62-77.
-
(1963)
The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana
-
-
Hill, P.1
-
90
-
-
0003297446
-
Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana
-
Oppong (ed.)
-
Among the more easily accessible sources are: G. Austin, 'The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1987), 259-79; J. Dunn and A. F. Robertson, Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo (Cambridge, 1973); Grier, 'Pawns', 304-28; P. Hill, The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana (Cambridge, 1963); C. Okali, 'Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana', in Oppong (ed.), Female and Male, 169-78; Mikell, Cocoa; and D. D. Vellenga, 'Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana', in C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), Women and Class in Africa (New York, 1986), 62-77.
-
Female and Male
, pp. 169-178
-
-
Okali, C.1
-
91
-
-
7644237391
-
-
Among the more easily accessible sources are: G. Austin, 'The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1987), 259-79; J. Dunn and A. F. Robertson, Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo (Cambridge, 1973); Grier, 'Pawns', 304-28; P. Hill, The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana (Cambridge, 1963); C. Okali, 'Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana', in Oppong (ed.), Female and Male, 169-78; Mikell, Cocoa; and D. D. Vellenga, 'Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana', in C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), Women and Class in Africa (New York, 1986), 62-77.
-
Cocoa
-
-
Mikell1
-
92
-
-
0009942309
-
Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana
-
C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), New York
-
Among the more easily accessible sources are: G. Austin, 'The emergence of capitalist relations in south Asante cocoa-farming, c. 1916-33', J. Afr. Hist., XXXII (1987), 259-79; J. Dunn and A. F. Robertson, Dependence and Opportunity : Political Change in Ahafo (Cambridge, 1973); Grier, 'Pawns', 304-28; P. Hill, The Migrant Cocoa-Farmers of Southern Ghana (Cambridge, 1963); C. Okali, 'Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana', in Oppong (ed.), Female and Male, 169-78; Mikell, Cocoa; and D. D. Vellenga, 'Matriliny, patriliny and class formation among women cocoa farmers in two rural areas of Ghana', in C. Robertson and I. Berger (eds.), Women and Class in Africa (New York, 1986), 62-77.
-
(1986)
Women and Class in Africa
, pp. 62-77
-
-
Vellenga, D.D.1
-
93
-
-
7644224144
-
-
note
-
Each of these authors draws from a very different research base. While Mikell's book concerns the impact of cocoa on Ghana generally, it draws very heavily from fieldwork in the Sunyani District in the early 1970s. Grier's recent analysis of gender, cocoa and colonialism in Ghana is based on existing secondary literature and on several published government reports from throughout the colony. While it provides a new reading of some of this literature, its conclusions largely echo Mikell's. Austin's work, by contrast, is located in Asante specifically, with much of the fieldwork drawing on the experiences of cocoa farmers in the Amansie (Bekwai) District of Asante. In the discussion which follows, I draw most heavily from Austin's contributions to our understanding because of their grounding in the specific dynamics of cocoa farming in Asante and because of the careful attention paid to organization of labour and to the subtle changes in that organization over time.
-
-
-
-
94
-
-
7644239096
-
-
Implicit in Roberts' discussion of cocoa in Sefwi Wiawso is such a 'gendered chronology', though it differs in important respects from the chronology proposed here for Asante. See Roberts, 'State', 53-5.
-
State
, pp. 53-55
-
-
Roberts1
-
95
-
-
7644232005
-
-
Austin, 'Cocoa-farming', 260-2 and Grier, 'Pawns', 314. Mikell, Cocoa, 107. See, also, G. Austin, 'Human pawning in Asante, 1800-1950: market and coercion, gender and cocoa', in T. Falola and P. E. Lovejoy (eds.), Pawnship in Africa : Debt Bondage in Historical Perspective (Boulder, 1994), 119-60.
-
Cocoa-farming
, pp. 260-262
-
-
Austin1
-
96
-
-
7644230864
-
-
Austin, 'Cocoa-farming', 260-2 and Grier, 'Pawns', 314. Mikell, Cocoa, 107. See, also, G. Austin, 'Human pawning in Asante, 1800-1950: market and coercion, gender and cocoa', in T. Falola and P. E. Lovejoy (eds.), Pawnship in
-
Pawns
, pp. 314
-
-
Grier1
-
97
-
-
7644237391
-
-
Austin, 'Cocoa-farming', 260-2 and Grier, 'Pawns', 314. Mikell, Cocoa, 107. See, also, G. Austin, 'Human pawning in Asante, 1800-1950: market and coercion, gender and cocoa', in T. Falola and P. E. Lovejoy (eds.), Pawnship in Africa : Debt Bondage in Historical Perspective (Boulder, 1994), 119-60.
-
Cocoa
, pp. 107
-
-
Mikell1
-
98
-
-
0040791011
-
Human pawning in Asante, 1800-1950: Market and coercion, gender and cocoa
-
T. Falola and P. E. Lovejoy (eds.), Boulder
-
Austin, 'Cocoa-farming', 260-2 and Grier, 'Pawns', 314. Mikell, Cocoa, 107. See, also, G. Austin, 'Human pawning in Asante, 1800-1950: market and coercion, gender and cocoa', in T. Falola and P. E. Lovejoy (eds.), Pawnship in Africa : Debt Bondage in Historical Perspective (Boulder, 1994), 119-60.
-
(1994)
Pawnship in Africa : Debt Bondage in Historical Perspective
, pp. 119-160
-
-
Austin, G.1
-
99
-
-
7644237998
-
-
Austin's earlier work is concerned with tying the abolition of slavery and pawnage to the initial use of hired labour on Asante cocoa farms, but not with changes in the gender division of labour. His recent discussions demonstrate quite convincingly that pawnage was not simply abolished, but declined in uneven, ambiguous and very gendered ways that profoundly impacted upon conjugal relationships. See his 'Cocoa-farming', 264-5 and 'Human pawning', 137-43.
-
Cocoa-farming
, pp. 264-265
-
-
-
100
-
-
7644232296
-
-
Austin's earlier work is concerned with tying the abolition of slavery and pawnage to the initial use of hired labour on Asante cocoa farms, but not with changes in the gender division of labour. His recent discussions demonstrate quite convincingly that pawnage was not simply abolished, but declined in uneven, ambiguous and very gendered ways that profoundly impacted upon conjugal relationships. See his 'Cocoa-farming', 264-5 and 'Human pawning', 137-43.
-
Human Pawning
, pp. 137-143
-
-
-
103
-
-
7644243197
-
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 141-2. Women's entry into cocoa farming occurred later and in important ways did not parallel men's entry. Most significantly, women's plots were generally smaller than men's, their size being limited, as Grier recently argued, 'by the labour [a woman] ... could spare, by the willingness of her kin members to help her out, and by her ability to acquire a pawn or hire a laborer'. Grier, 'Pawns', 322.
-
Human Pawning
, pp. 141-142
-
-
Austin1
-
104
-
-
7644230864
-
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 141-2. Women's entry into cocoa farming occurred later and in important ways did not parallel men's entry. Most significantly, women's plots were generally smaller than men's, their size being limited, as Grier recently argued, 'by the labour [a woman] ... could spare, by the willingness of her kin members to help her out, and by her ability to acquire a pawn or hire a laborer'. Grier, 'Pawns', 322.
-
Pawns
, pp. 322
-
-
Grier1
-
108
-
-
7644243197
-
-
Austin notes the special case of pawn-wives who had to share some of their proceeds with their 'creditor-husbands' and thus had less incentive to acquire farms in their own right as a means of security and autonomy. See Austin, 'Human pawning', 142.
-
Human Pawning
, pp. 142
-
-
Austin1
-
109
-
-
7644243197
-
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 142-3; Clark, Onions, esp. 316-18.
-
Human Pawning
, pp. 142-143
-
-
Austin1
-
110
-
-
7644241768
-
-
esp. 316-18
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 142-3; Clark, Onions, esp. 316-18.
-
Onions
-
-
Clark1
-
111
-
-
7644221948
-
-
1 Sept.
-
Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 1 Sept. 1992.
-
(1992)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
112
-
-
7644232006
-
-
note
-
Countless numbers of such cases can be found in the record books stored at Manhyia Record Office. See, particularly, the records of the Kumasihene's Native Tribunal, 1926-35, the Asantehene's Divisional Native Court B, 1935-60 and the Kumasi Divisional ('Clan') Courts, 1928-45 (consisting of Kyidom, Kronti, Gyasi, Ankobia, Oyoko, Benkum, Akwamu and Adonten).
-
-
-
-
113
-
-
7644236244
-
-
Roberts noted a similar pattern in Sefwi Wiawso. See her 'State', 54-5.
-
State
, pp. 54-55
-
-
-
114
-
-
7644243197
-
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 143. Grier suggests that the payment of tiri sika was a colonial invention. Grier, 'Pawns', 327-8. Austin counters that interpretation in 'Human pawning', 125-6 and 149, n. 44, rightly pointing out that nothing in Fortes' unpublished papers suggests that tiri sika was of recent origin. Much of Fortes' information on marriage for the 'Ashanti Social Survey' of the mid 1940s was gathered by T. E. Kyei and Kyei's work certainly confirms Austin's interpretation. See T. E. Kyei, Marriage.
-
Human Pawning
, pp. 143
-
-
Austin1
-
115
-
-
7644230864
-
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 143. Grier suggests that the payment of tiri sika was a colonial invention. Grier, 'Pawns', 327-8. Austin counters that interpretation in 'Human pawning', 125-6 and 149, n. 44, rightly pointing out that nothing in Fortes' unpublished papers suggests that tiri sika was of recent origin. Much of Fortes' information on marriage for the 'Ashanti Social Survey' of the mid 1940s was gathered by T. E. Kyei and Kyei's work certainly confirms Austin's interpretation. See T. E. Kyei, Marriage.
-
Pawns
, pp. 327-328
-
-
Grier1
-
116
-
-
7644230865
-
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 143. Grier suggests that the payment of tiri sika was a colonial invention. Grier, 'Pawns', 327-8. Austin counters that interpretation in 'Human pawning', 125-6 and 149, n. 44, rightly pointing out that nothing in Fortes' unpublished papers suggests that tiri sika was of recent origin. Much of Fortes' information on marriage for the 'Ashanti Social Survey' of the mid 1940s was gathered by T. E. Kyei and Kyei's work certainly confirms Austin's interpretation. See T. E. Kyei, Marriage.
-
Human Pawning
, Issue.44
, pp. 125-126
-
-
-
117
-
-
7644224422
-
-
Austin, 'Human pawning', 143. Grier suggests that the payment of tiri sika was a colonial invention. Grier, 'Pawns', 327-8. Austin counters that interpretation in 'Human pawning', 125-6 and 149, n. 44, rightly pointing out that nothing in Fortes' unpublished papers suggests that tiri sika was of recent origin. Much of Fortes' information on marriage for the 'Ashanti Social Survey' of the mid 1940s was gathered by T. E. Kyei and Kyei's work certainly confirms Austin's interpretation. See T. E. Kyei, Marriage.
-
Marriage
-
-
Kyei, T.E.1
-
118
-
-
7644235708
-
-
Asante women were not unique in this regard. As Lovett has written on the Copperbelt, 'Women seized new avenues of power and agency, such as the creation of colonial courts, and also actively constructed other opportunities, such as prostitution and fluid urban marital arrangements, in order to accumulate surplus, gain autonomy, and exercise control over their own labor power, fertility and sexuality'. Lovett, 'Gender relations', 24.
-
Gender Relations
, pp. 24
-
-
Lovett1
-
119
-
-
7644239096
-
-
Roberts, 'State', 49. See, also, Allman, '"Spinsters", 176-89. Perceptions of a 'moral crisis' were not unique to Asante. Women's economic or social autonomy was often interpreted as sexual uncontrollability. See, for example, Hunt, 'Camouflaged polygamy', 471-94 and 'Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960', in J. O'Barr, D. Pope and M. Wyer (eds.), Ties That Bind, 149-77, esp. 155-6; C. Summers, 'Intimate colonialism: the imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925', Signs, XVI (1991), 787-807; E. Schmidt, Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959 (Portsmouth, NH, 1992), esp. 98-106 and most recently Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-69.
-
State
, pp. 49
-
-
Roberts1
-
120
-
-
7644226940
-
-
Roberts, 'State', 49. See, also, Allman, '"Spinsters", 176-89. Perceptions of a 'moral crisis' were not unique to Asante. Women's economic or social autonomy was often interpreted as sexual uncontrollability. See, for example, Hunt, 'Camouflaged polygamy', 471-94 and 'Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960', in J. O'Barr, D. Pope and M. Wyer (eds.), Ties That Bind, 149-77, esp. 155-6; C. Summers, 'Intimate colonialism: the imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925', Signs, XVI (1991), 787-807; E. Schmidt, Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959 (Portsmouth, NH, 1992), esp. 98-106 and most recently Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-69.
-
Spinsters
, pp. 176-189
-
-
Allman1
-
121
-
-
7644227232
-
-
Roberts, 'State', 49. See, also, Allman, '"Spinsters", 176-89. Perceptions of a 'moral crisis' were not unique to Asante. Women's economic or social autonomy was often interpreted as sexual uncontrollability. See, for example, Hunt, 'Camouflaged polygamy', 471-94 and 'Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960', in J. O'Barr, D. Pope and M. Wyer (eds.), Ties That Bind, 149-77, esp. 155-6; C. Summers, 'Intimate colonialism: the imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925', Signs, XVI (1991), 787-807; E. Schmidt, Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959 (Portsmouth, NH, 1992), esp. 98-106 and most recently Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-69.
-
Camouflaged Polygamy
, pp. 471-494
-
-
Hunt1
-
122
-
-
7644229110
-
Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960
-
esp. 155-6
-
Roberts, 'State', 49. See, also, Allman, '"Spinsters", 176-89. Perceptions of a 'moral crisis' were not unique to Asante. Women's economic or social autonomy was often interpreted as sexual uncontrollability. See, for example, Hunt, 'Camouflaged polygamy', 471-94 and 'Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960', in J. O'Barr, D. Pope and M. Wyer (eds.), Ties That Bind, 149-77, esp. 155-6; C. Summers, 'Intimate colonialism: the imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925', Signs, XVI (1991), 787-807; E. Schmidt, Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959 (Portsmouth, NH, 1992), esp. 98-106 and most recently Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-69.
-
Ties That Bind
, pp. 149-177
-
-
O'Barr, J.1
Pope, D.2
Wyer, M.3
-
123
-
-
84928441989
-
Intimate colonialism: The imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925
-
Roberts, 'State', 49. See, also, Allman, '"Spinsters", 176-89. Perceptions of a 'moral crisis' were not unique to Asante. Women's economic or social autonomy was often interpreted as sexual uncontrollability. See, for example, Hunt, 'Camouflaged polygamy', 471-94 and 'Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960', in J. O'Barr, D. Pope and M. Wyer (eds.), Ties That Bind, 149-77, esp. 155-6; C. Summers, 'Intimate colonialism: the imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925', Signs, XVI (1991), 787-807; E. Schmidt, Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959 (Portsmouth, NH, 1992), esp. 98-106 and most recently Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-69.
-
(1991)
Signs
, vol.16
, pp. 787-807
-
-
Summers, C.1
-
124
-
-
0004075319
-
-
Portsmouth, NH, esp. 98-106
-
Roberts, 'State', 49. See, also, Allman, '"Spinsters", 176-89. Perceptions of a 'moral crisis' were not unique to Asante. Women's economic or social autonomy was often interpreted as sexual uncontrollability. See, for example, Hunt, 'Camouflaged polygamy', 471-94 and 'Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960', in J. O'Barr, D. Pope and M. Wyer (eds.), Ties That Bind, 149-77, esp. 155-6; C. Summers, 'Intimate colonialism: the imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925', Signs, XVI (1991), 787-807; E. Schmidt, Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959 (Portsmouth, NH, 1992), esp. 98-106 and most recently Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-69.
-
(1992)
Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959
-
-
Schmidt, E.1
-
125
-
-
7644223029
-
-
esp. 119-69
-
Roberts, 'State', 49. See, also, Allman, '"Spinsters", 176-89. Perceptions of a 'moral crisis' were not unique to Asante. Women's economic or social autonomy was often interpreted as sexual uncontrollability. See, for example, Hunt, 'Camouflaged polygamy', 471-94 and 'Domesticity and colonialism in Belgian Africa: Usumbura's Foyer Social, 1946-1960', in J. O'Barr, D. Pope and M. Wyer (eds.), Ties That Bind, 149-77, esp. 155-6; C. Summers, 'Intimate colonialism: the imperial production of reproduction in Uganda, 1907-1925', Signs, XVI (1991), 787-807; E. Schmidt, Peasants, Traders and Wives : Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1959 (Portsmouth, NH, 1992), esp. 98-106 and most recently Jeater, Marriage, esp. 119-69.
-
Marriage
-
-
Jeater1
-
126
-
-
84920667491
-
-
esp. 32-8 and 260-6
-
discuss the role of missionaries and medical officers in this ordering process in 'Making mothers'. Jeater argues that the very concept of 'moral realm' is a colonial construct - a process by which 'Africans as well as whites began to conceptualize issues of gender and sexuality in terms of individual acts ... which were disassociated from the broader context of family membership'. Marriage, esp. 32-8 and 260-6. Though the number of Europeans in Asante at this time make direct parallels with Southern Rhodesia problematic, Jeater's definition of 'moral realm' as colonizing process translates quite easily to the Asante context.
-
Marriage
-
-
-
127
-
-
84901654989
-
-
esp. 129-40
-
Vaughan, Curing, esp. 129-40, and J. Parpart, '"Where is your mother?": gender, urban marriage and colonial discourse on the Zambian Copperbelt, 1924-1945', Int. J. Afr. Hist. Studies, XXVII (1994), 241-71, but esp. 244-9, make important contributions to our understanding of the gendered implications of indirect rule. Unfortunately, most scholars addressing this question work in areas with sizeable settler populations, in former colonies where indirect rule institutions bore little resemblance to pre-colonial political organizations. (Roberts' pioneering work on Sefwi Wiawso is an important exception here. See Roberts, 'State', esp. 48-57.) In these settler areas, customary law and native courts appear very much as colonial inventions. The Asante material is far more difficult to sort through because the information we have regarding the pre-colonial period is so extensive and continuities with the pre-colonial past so striking. For the nineteenth century, see the sources cited in n. 12 above. For some tentative reflections on the political economy of indirect rule and continuities with the nineteenth-century Asanteman, see Allman, '"Spinsters"', esp. 183-6, and 'Adultery'.
-
Curing
-
-
Vaughan1
-
128
-
-
0043043758
-
"Where is your mother?": Gender, urban marriage and colonial discourse on the Zambian Copperbelt, 1924-1945
-
but esp. 244-9
-
Vaughan, Curing, esp. 129-40, and J. Parpart, '"Where is your mother?": gender, urban marriage and colonial discourse on the Zambian Copperbelt, 1924-1945', Int. J. Afr. Hist. Studies, XXVII (1994), 241-71, but esp. 244-9, make important contributions to our understanding of the gendered implications of indirect rule. Unfortunately, most scholars addressing this question work in areas with sizeable settler populations, in former colonies where indirect rule institutions bore little resemblance to pre-colonial political organizations. (Roberts' pioneering work on Sefwi Wiawso is an important exception here. See Roberts, 'State', esp. 48-57.) In these settler areas, customary law and native courts appear very much as colonial inventions. The Asante material is far more difficult to sort through because the information we have regarding the pre-colonial period is so extensive and continuities with the pre-colonial past so striking. For the nineteenth century, see the sources cited in n. 12 above. For some tentative reflections on the political economy of indirect rule and continuities with the nineteenth-century Asanteman, see Allman, '"Spinsters"', esp. 183-6, and 'Adultery'.
-
(1994)
Int. J. Afr. Hist. Studies
, vol.27
, pp. 241-271
-
-
Parpart, J.1
-
129
-
-
7644239096
-
-
esp. 48-57
-
Vaughan, Curing, esp. 129-40, and J. Parpart, '"Where is your mother?": gender, urban marriage and colonial discourse on the Zambian Copperbelt, 1924-1945', Int. J. Afr. Hist. Studies, XXVII (1994), 241-71, but esp. 244-9, make important contributions to our understanding of the gendered implications of indirect rule. Unfortunately, most scholars addressing this question work in areas with sizeable settler populations, in former colonies where indirect rule institutions bore little resemblance to pre-colonial political organizations. (Roberts' pioneering work on Sefwi Wiawso is an important exception here. See Roberts, 'State', esp. 48-57.) In these settler areas, customary law and native courts appear very much as colonial inventions. The Asante material is far more difficult to sort through because the information we have regarding the pre-colonial period is so extensive and continuities with the pre-colonial past so striking. For the nineteenth century, see the sources cited in n. 12 above. For some tentative reflections on the political economy of indirect rule and continuities with the nineteenth-century Asanteman, see Allman, '"Spinsters"', esp. 183-6, and 'Adultery'.
-
State
-
-
Roberts1
-
130
-
-
7644226940
-
-
esp. 183-6
-
Vaughan, Curing, esp. 129-40, and J. Parpart, '"Where is your mother?": gender, urban marriage and colonial discourse on the Zambian Copperbelt, 1924-1945', Int. J. Afr. Hist. Studies, XXVII (1994), 241-71, but esp. 244-9, make important contributions to our understanding of the gendered implications of indirect rule. Unfortunately, most scholars addressing this question work in areas with sizeable settler populations, in former colonies where indirect rule institutions bore little resemblance to pre-colonial political organizations. (Roberts' pioneering work on Sefwi Wiawso is an important exception here. See Roberts, 'State', esp. 48-57.) In these settler areas, customary law and native courts appear very much as colonial inventions. The Asante material is far more difficult to sort through because the information we have regarding the pre-colonial period is so extensive and continuities with the pre-colonial past so striking. For the nineteenth century, see the sources cited in n. 12 above. For some tentative reflections on the political economy of indirect rule and continuities with the nineteenth-century Asanteman, see Allman, '"Spinsters"', esp. 183-6, and 'Adultery'.
-
Spinsters
-
-
Allman1
-
131
-
-
7644221390
-
-
Vaughan, Curing, esp. 129-40, and J. Parpart, '"Where is your mother?": gender, urban marriage and colonial discourse on the Zambian Copperbelt, 1924-1945', Int. J. Afr. Hist. Studies, XXVII (1994), 241-71, but esp. 244-9, make important contributions to our understanding of the gendered implications of indirect rule. Unfortunately, most scholars addressing this question work in areas with sizeable settler populations, in former colonies where indirect rule institutions bore little resemblance to pre-colonial political organizations. (Roberts' pioneering work on Sefwi Wiawso is an important exception here. See Roberts, 'State', esp. 48-57.) In these settler areas, customary law and native courts appear very much as colonial inventions. The Asante material is far more difficult to sort through because the information we have regarding the pre-colonial period is so extensive and continuities with the pre-colonial past so striking. For the nineteenth century, see the sources cited in n. 12 above. For some tentative reflections on the political economy of indirect rule and continuities with the nineteenth-century Asanteman, see Allman, '"Spinsters"', esp. 183-6, and 'Adultery'.
-
Adultery
-
-
-
132
-
-
0040790997
-
-
7-23 Mar.
-
For example, chiefs and elders refused to consider allowing wives to inherit from their husbands, even if a woman had worked for years on her husband's cocoa farm, for fear that Asante women would simply poison their husbands at the slightest provocation in order to inherit the farm. See Asante Confederacy Council, Minutes of the Third Session, 7-23 Mar. 1938. Not until 1948 did the Council rule in favour of allowing a wife and child to inherit one-third of a man's property if he died intestate. However, the ruling was without legislative effect. For a full listing of Council orders, including those on adultery and wives' fidelity, see
-
(1938)
Minutes of the Third Session
-
-
-
138
-
-
7644230864
-
-
Grier, 'Pawns', 323-8. While few would disagree with her notion that indirect rule 'reinforced the legal and coercive power of chiefs and male elders over their historic dependents', most would insist that the 'whys and hows' of that broad observation cannot be addressed by simply casting indirect rule as the obvious, invented and uncontested response of a colonial government intent on guaranteeing 'girls and women as unpaid sources of labor'. One of the first casualties of such an equation is women's historical agency in the making of the colonial world.
-
Pawns
, pp. 323-328
-
-
Grier1
-
139
-
-
0040557809
-
Law in colonial Africa
-
their (eds.), Portsmouth, NH
-
Kristin Mann and Richard Roberts, 'Law in colonial Africa', in their (eds.), Law in Colonial Africa (Portsmouth, NH, 1991), 13-14 and 21.
-
(1991)
Law in Colonial Africa
, pp. 13-14
-
-
Mann, K.1
Roberts, R.2
-
140
-
-
7644222767
-
-
30 June
-
Eponuahemaa Afua Fom, Effiduasi, 30 June 1993.
-
(1993)
Effiduasi
-
-
-
141
-
-
84972287270
-
British justice and the Native Tribunals of the southern Gold Coast Colony
-
but esp. 108-10
-
For an important discussion of the ways in which women to the south of Asante used the British justice system during this period, see R. Cocking, 'British justice and the Native Tribunals of the southern Gold Coast Colony', J. Afr. Hist., XXXIV (1993), 93-113, but esp. 108-10.
-
(1993)
J. Afr. Hist.
, vol.34
, pp. 93-113
-
-
Cocking, R.1
|