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The problem of feedback in oral tradion:four examples form the Fante coastlands1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

David P. Henige
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham

Extract

Little attention has been devoted to the uncritical and almost reflexive incorporation of available printed information into allegedly oral historical materials. This inclination is particularly strong when oral traditions attempt to cope with material more than a century old. The present paper discusses the mechanisms by which such ‘feedback’ materials were incorporated into the traditional accounts of four coastal Fante stools, and the ambiences which encouraged such processes.

Stool, succession, and land disputes were concomitants of Fante political activity, and the imposition by the British of an indirect form of rule allowed Fante traditional historians ample scope for manipulating and creating traditions to fit every contingency. The high level of literacy among the Fante and the relatively large number of early printed works which touched upon the history of the area only served to encourage these propensities. For various reasons many of these barnacles failed to become entrenched, but others were accepted by the British at the time that they were advanced and have since become the accepted and orthodox versions of traditional accounts.

While in degree the responses of the Fante were not representative of other African societies, in kind their responses were wholly typical of the development of oral historical materials almost everywhere. The historian must consider a given tradition as having been dynamic over time, and must concern himself not only with its content, but with the circumstances of its development as well.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1973

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References

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23 Reindorf, History, 14.Google Scholar Reindorf's own source is unclear. It was probably Ellis, A. B., A History of the Gold Coast of West Africa (London, 1893), 18, or Cruikshank, Eighteen Years, 1, 17, although the latter rather inexplicably referred to Caramansa as ‘Camaianca’. The second edition of Reindorf, published in 1951, called this ruler Kwamina Ansa, although still referring to him as ruler of Fetu.Google Scholar

24 Thus when the Jmanhen Condua III was destooled in 1918, one of the charges against him was that he insisted on using ‘foreign [i.e. English] language… unremittingly during the daily sessions of the ‘Native’ Tribunal' and that few Elminans could understand it. NAG/A, ADMII/,/IIII, box 1. Today no one in Elmina can speak Dutch.Google Scholar

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32 Claridge, History, I, 44. It is ironic that in all probability quite the reverse is true.Google Scholar

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35 I plan to take up the origins and early history of the Komenda paramount stool in greater detail at a later date.Google Scholar

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43 Sessional Paper, 23. Harper also asserted, correctly, I think, that ‘the stools in some of the most important coast towns [were] parasitic growths clinging to the forts’.However, his further assertion that their founders were ‘headmen appointed by the Commandants of the forts’ is more arguable, particularly in the case of Kabes, who was clearly the dominant figure in Komenda during his lifetime. Sesnonal Paper No., p. 10.Google Scholar

44 NAG/CC, RAO 1305, unpaginated.Google Scholar

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54 Pen and Contract dd 10 July 1781, FC 1781–1816, 1781–2, p. 156 [WIC 989]. Jabi is now Ya[r]biw, and a part of Shama paramount stool, where the chief of Yabiw serves as benkumhen. In a vague way the Shama traditions recognize this early relationship between Jabi and Sharma by claiming that the founders of Shama paused briefly at Yabiw on their way to the coast. Meyerowitz, Traditions, 7.Google Scholar

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62 For Boa see Huydecoper, W. to West India Company, 14 Sept. 1763, FC 1760–1764, 1767, p. II [WIC 115]. Cf. genealogy submitted at Apollonia [the official name of Nzima before 1927] Enquiry of p. 28a, NAG/A, ADM 11/1/1699.Google Scholar

63 Among these would be the stool traditions of several other coastal stools, including Dixcove, Anamabu, Oguaa, and Winneba.Google Scholar

64 It would be an interesting and perhaps enlightening exercise to collate all the printed sources Reindorf used to determine how much of his ‘traditional’ material come from these sources.Google Scholar

65 For this aspect of Asante stool traditions see my ‘Quest for a Chimera: the chronology of oral tradition’, Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin, 1972, chapter 6.Google Scholar

66 An excellent illustration of this is discussed in Vail, H. L., ‘Suggestions towards a reinterpreted Turnbuka history’ in Pachai, B. (ed.), The Early History of Malawi (London, 1971), 148–67. See also Henige, ‘Kingship in Elmina’ and idem., ‘K.W.’s Nyoro kinglist— the result of oral tradition or applied research?’, a paper presented at the Fifteenth Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 8–11 1972.Google Scholar

67 Welinan, Ahanta, 68.Google Scholar