Environment as Justice: Interpreting the State(s) of Drowning and Undercurrents of Power in Ghana

IF 0.1 Q2 Arts and Humanities Australasian Review of African Studies Pub Date : 2019-06-01 DOI:10.22160/22035184/ARAS-2019-40-1/12-30
Kirsty Wissing
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Abstract

This article explores Akwamu understandings of the Volta and other rivers in Ghana - valued for their life-giving qualities - when they become the opposite: the cause of death by drowning. By engaging with customary ideas of the environment as an active player, influenced by deities, I seek to map local Akwamu perspectives of the environment as justice onto international models that posit the environment in need of justice and guardianship through human management. Akwamu traditional authorities have described river environments as a fair and unbiased avenue through which to resolve disputes. By dwelling on drowning, I explore Akwamu and broader Akan notions of 'good' or 'natural' compared to 'bad' or 'unnatural' deaths, the latter thought to reflect human-environment and inter-human social breakdown as well as the moral worth of the drowned victim. Through customary ritual practices, traditional representatives separate the Akwamu state, or society, from an individual's bad, watery death and restore human-environment and inter-human order in social life on land. Stir the waters, however, and Akwamu understandings of rivers highlight a hierarchy in human-environment relations as well as undercurrents of power between humans. By analysing beliefs, interpretations, and ritual behaviours in response to drowning, I reconceptualise Akwamu dynamics of power in reflections on environments as justice.
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环境即正义:解读加纳的溺水状态和权力暗流
这篇文章探讨了阿克瓦穆人对加纳的沃尔特河和其他河流的理解——这些河流因其赋予生命的品质而受到重视——当它们成为相反的原因时:溺水死亡。通过将环境视为积极参与者的习惯观念,受神的影响,我试图将当地的阿克瓦木环境观点作为正义映射到国际模式中,这种模式假定环境需要通过人类管理来实现正义和监护。阿克瓦木传统权威将河流环境描述为解决争端的公平和公正的途径。通过对溺水的深入研究,我探索了Akwamu和更广泛的Akan关于“好”或“自然”与“坏”或“非自然”死亡的概念,后者被认为反映了人类环境和人与人之间的社会崩溃以及溺水受害者的道德价值。通过传统的仪式实践,传统代表将阿克瓦木州或社会与个人的不幸、溺水死亡分开,并恢复陆地上社会生活中的人与环境和人与人之间的秩序。然而,搅动河水,阿克瓦穆对河流的理解强调了人与环境关系中的等级关系,以及人类之间的权力暗流。通过分析溺水的信仰、解释和仪式行为,我重新定义了Akwamu在环境正义反思中的权力动态。
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期刊介绍: The Australasian Review of African Studies aims to contribute to a better understanding of Africa in Australasia and the Pacific. It is published twice a year in June and December by The African Studies Association of Australasia and the Pacific. ARAS is a multi-disciplinary journal that seeks to provide critical, authoritative and accessible material on a range of African affairs that is interesting and readable to as broad an audience as possible, both academic and non-academic. All articles are blind peer reviewed by two independent and qualified experts in their entirety prior to publication. Each issue includes both scholarly and generalist articles, a book review section (which normally includes a lengthy review essay), short notes on contemporary African issues and events (up to 2,000 words), as well as reports on research and professional involvement in Africa, and on African university activities. What makes the Review distinctive as a professional journal is this ‘mix’ of authoritative scholarly and generalist material on critical African issues written from very different disciplinary and professional perspectives. The Review is available to all members of the African Studies Association of Australia and the Pacific as part of their membership. Membership is open to anyone interested in African affairs, and the annual subscription fee is modest. The ARAS readership intersects academic, professional, voluntary agency and public audiences and includes specialists, non-specialists and members of the growing African community in Australia. There is also now a small but growing international readership which extends to Africa, North America and the United Kingdom.
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