Decolonising Mind and Being Associated with Marriage: Perspectives from Ghana

IF 0.9 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Psychology and Developing Societies Pub Date : 2023-02-27 DOI:10.1177/09713336231152311
S. Adjei, Anthony Mpiani
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Abstract

Colonialism was not only a political imposition but also a cultural one that both affected and infected institutions and ways of knowing and being of colonised societies. The vestiges of colonial power that originated during the colonial period of European global domination persistently influence minds and behaviours associated with the institution of marriage through the axes of meta-colonialism, and represent forms of epistemic violence against indigenous people. The depiction of modern/colonial mentalities about marriage (e.g., the so-called White wedding) as an optimal expression of human nature and love—and thus a key to personal happiness—have become part of the Ghanaian/African cultural experience. For example, Eurocentric practice of White wedding has been systematically naturalised and pushed down on Ghanaian/African people as the most enlightened, valid and standard form of marriage, supplanting the indigenous and ancestral forms of knowledge and being associated with marriage. Drawing insights from cultural psychology, we discuss the coloniality of mind and being associated with marriage, particularly the popular practice of White wedding, and examine how marriage practices in Ghana have become associated with Western social, cultural and economic interests propagated by colonial discourses of modernity, social change and development. We argue that the valorisation of European White wedding and the inferiorisation of African traditional marriage practices are corollary of colonial and meta-colonial narratives that promote(d) White normativity. We posit that psychological knowledge and practice, informed by Western ontologies and epistemologies, provided ideological support for colonisation and the perpetration and perpetuation of scientific racism. We thus contend that, given its complicity, the present discipline of scientific psychology cannot be an effective tool to dismantle the ill-effects of past and present unequal power relationships that result(ed) from colonisation. A decolonial psychological science that enables critical consciousness and serves as a necessary catalyst for liberating minds and being is thus required.
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非殖民化思想与婚姻:来自加纳的观点
殖民主义不仅是一种政治强加,也是一种文化强加,它影响和感染了被殖民社会的制度和认识方式。起源于欧洲全球统治的殖民时期的殖民权力残余,通过元殖民主义的轴心,持续影响着与婚姻制度相关的思想和行为,并代表着对土著人民的认识暴力形式。将现代/殖民主义的婚姻心态(例如所谓的白人婚礼)描述为人性和爱情的最佳表达,从而成为个人幸福的关键,这已成为加纳/非洲文化体验的一部分。例如,以欧洲为中心的白人婚礼做法被系统地归化,并被加纳/非洲人民视为最开明、最有效和最标准的婚姻形式,取代了土著和祖先的知识形式,并与婚姻联系在一起。从文化心理学的角度出发,我们讨论了思想的殖民性和与婚姻的联系,特别是白人婚礼的流行做法,并考察了加纳的婚姻做法如何与现代性、社会变革和发展的殖民话语传播的西方社会、文化和经济利益联系在一起。我们认为,对欧洲白人婚礼的重视和对非洲传统婚姻做法的贬低是促进(d)白人规范性的殖民和元殖民叙事的必然结果。我们认为,在西方本体论和认识论的指导下,心理学知识和实践为殖民主义以及科学种族主义的实施和延续提供了意识形态支持。因此,我们认为,鉴于其共谋性,目前的科学心理学学科不可能成为消除殖民主义造成的过去和现在不平等权力关系不良影响的有效工具。因此,需要一种非殖民化的心理科学,使批判性意识成为解放思想和存在的必要催化剂。
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来源期刊
Psychology and Developing Societies
Psychology and Developing Societies PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Get a better perspective on the role of psychology in the developing world in Psychology and Developing Societies. This unique journal features a common platform for debate by psychologists from various parts of the world; articles based on alternate paradigms, indigenous concepts, and relevant methods for social policies in developing societies; and the unique socio-cultural and historical experiences of developing countries compared to Euro-American societies.
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