The Asante World provides fresh perspectives on the Asante, the largest Akan group in Southern Ghana, and what new scholars are thinking and writing about the "world the Asante made."
By employing a thematic approach, the volume interrogates several dimensions of Asante history including state formation, Asante-Ahafo and Bassari-Dagomba relations in the context of Asante northward expansion, and the expansion to the south. It examines the role of Islam which, although extremely intense for just a short time, had important ramifications. Together the essays excavate key aspects of Asante political economy and culture, exemplified in kola nut production, the kente/adinkra cloth types and their associated symbols, proverbs, and drum language. The Asante World explores the Asante origins of Jamaican maroons, Asante secular government, contemporary politics of progress, governance through the institution of Ahemaa or Queenmothers, epidemiology and disease, and education in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Featuring innovative and insightful contributions from leading historians of the Asante world, this volume is essential reading for advanced undergraduates, postgraduates, and scholars concerned with African Studies, African diaspora history, the history of Ghana and the Gold Coast, the history of Islam in Africa, and Asante history.
Author(s): Edmund Abaka, Kwame Osei Kwarteng
Series: Routledge Worlds
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2021
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Figures
List of Contributors
1 Introduction
PART 1
2 Ahafo–Asante relations, 1712–1935
3 The Asante factor in the political reorientation of northern Ghana: a historical evaluation of Bassari-Dagomba relations, 1745–1876
4 Asante imperium expansion: imperial outlook and the construction of empire
5 Contending empires: Asante and Britain from the 17th to 19th century
PART 2
6 Historical reconstruction of an Asante ancillary state: origin, migration, and settlement of Sekyere Kwamang
7 Dupuis’ discourse on Asante in the 19th century: an evaluation of the Islamic themes in Journal of a Residence in Ashantee (1824)
8 Why Islam did not make significant impact on Asante during the 18th and the 19th centuries
PART 3
9 “Red gold”: kola nuts, the kola nut trade, and the political economy of Asante c. 1820–1960
10 “An indigenous innovative touch”: the significance of the kente cloth in Asante culture
11 Adinkra symbols and proverbs as tools for elucidating indigenous Asante political thought
12 The tropology of Akan drum language: sounds and meanings from the Mamponghene’s drum appellation
PART 4
13 A political architecture of the leadership crisis of the Kumasi Central Mosque from 1970 to 2013
14 Claiming Asante: the Akan origins of Jamaican Maroons
PART 5
15 Secular governmentality and the court of the Asante Ahemaa in 21st century: an ethnographic account of the Ejisu and Juaben traditional areas
16 Epidemiology and local responses to diseases in Asante: a focus on Kumase since the beginning of the twentieth century
17 Girl child education in Asante, 1901–1957
Index