Our Days Dwindle: Memories of My Childhood Days in AsanteT. E. Kyei's memoirs trace his life from his early childhood in the opening decade of the twentieth century through Ghana's independence in 1957. The autobiography demonstrates this consummate cultural translator's ability to both intuit the questions raised by those unfamiliar with Asante culture and also seamlessly weave answers to such questions into his narrative. The detail on social and material life contained in Kyei's memoirs is unparalleled in the scholarly literature on Asante. His writings open up fundamental questions about the production (and producers) of historical knowledge about African societies and they will surely inspire a major reassessment of the categories and concepts Africanist scholars have used in their studies of African societies. T.E. Kyei, served as the principal research assistant in the data collection for noted anthropologist Meyer Fortes's Ashanti Social Survey, which was published in the mid-1940s. As Jean Allman explains in her introduction, however, Kyei played a vital role not only in the collection of data Fortes used, but also in its interpretation. In this vivid autobiography, the author presents not only his personal and professional recollections, but also contributes significantly to our understanding of a crucial time period in Ghanaian history. |
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Contenido
A Stranger Home from SekyereKwaaman | 1 |
The Town I Grew Up | 21 |
An Honoured Profession that is No More | 33 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 11 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Our Days Dwindle: Memories of My Childhood Days in Asante Thomas E. Kyei,Jean Marie Allman Sin vista previa disponible - 2001 |
Términos y frases comunes
Afram Agogo Agogohene Akua Akwasua arrived Asante asked balls became body brought called carried Chief child Christmas church cleared close cloth cocoa collected completed continued course dance daughter death disease dishes drink early Elders farm Father fetish fish forest give given grandmother grew ground hand head heard hunter hunting husband killed Kwaku Kwame Kyei land later leaves lineage lived meal meat morning Mother moved Nana Nephew night Opanin operation particular person pieces plantain planted prepared present quarter reached relatives returned river Salem School season share short sister snails soup stick Stool stream taken thing told took town tree Uncle week wife woman women yams yard young