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4 - On the Road to Ghana: Negotiations, Paradoxes, Pratfalls

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 March 2023

Kwaku Korang
Affiliation:
Ohio State University
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Summary

Horton's Pragmatism and After: The “Gold Coast Nation” in Attoh Ahuma's Rhetoric of Political Demand

Even the Awoonahs who have been our enemies for the past twenty years have now joined us and have agreed willingly and joyfully to join the deputation movement.

—Tackie, King of Accra, to Kwame Fori, King of Akwapim, 1886

The epigraph is taken from the context of late-nineteenth-century interethnic diplomacy in colonial Gold Coast. The letter of the ethnic Ga, King Tackie of Accra, to the ethnic Akan, King Kwame Fori of Akwapim (or Akuapem), in which the former urges the worthy example of the ethnic Anlo-Ewe on his addressee, is produced here as an instance of the anticolonial solidarities which, mobilized at the time, were making for the incipient “nationalization” of the Colony. King Tackie's letter is issued in the context of widespread native protests against the heavy-handed usurpation by the British Crown of the sovereign rights constituting the legitimate basis of the indigenous polities of the country.

The King of Accra would likely not have seen the conclusions contained in a memo written by one Sir Edward Cust in 1839. Nevertheless it is a memo worth recalling since the goals that Tackie and others in the 1885–87 Gold Coast Deputation Movement stood for were directly opposed to its conclusions. Titled “Reflections on West African Affairs,” and addressed to the Colonial Office, Cust's piece foretells the shape and direction British policy on the Gold Coast would take, especially in the last few years leading up to, and those following, the promulgation of the Colony in 1874. Cust then wrote:

It is out of season at this time of the day, to question the original policy of conferring on every colony of the British Empire a mimic representation of the British constitution. But if the creature so endowed has sometimes forgotten its real insignificance and under the fancied importance of speakers and maces and all … has dared to defy the mother country, she has to thank herself for the folly of conferring such privileges on a condition of society that has no earthly claim to so exalted a position.

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Writing Ghana, Imagining Africa
Nation and African Modernity
, pp. 145 - 173
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2004

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