African Pharmakon: The Asylum as Shrine from Slavery to the Return.
When:
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Venue:
Birkbeck Clore Management Centre
African Pharmakon: The Asylum as Shrine from Slavery to the Return. Nana Osei Quarshie (Yale)
Thursday 3rd April 2025, 6.00pm, followed by a wine reception
Clore Management Centre, Birkbeck, University of London, 25-27 Torrington Square, London WC1E 7JL
Book here (QuarshieLecture.eventbrite.co.uk)
West Africans were far from passive victims of European-imposed psychiatric concepts and institutions. Rather, they enchanted the British colonial asylum in Accra (contemporary Ghana) by accommodating European psychiatric practices principally as experiences within the dynamic tapestry of African ritual and political concerns over territorial control, bodily afflictions, and psychological belonging within families, communities, and states. African people mobilized practices associated by the mid-nineteenth century with healing and harming at shrines of territorial spirits to politically harness the development of psychiatric social control. That is, European psychiatry did not colonize African minds, nor did it displace African psychotherapeutic norms. It was instead built on and grafted onto a repertoire of African healing and harming practices through socio-economic, political, and ritual transactions that, in the case of coastal Ghana, unfolded over the course of centuries.
For information please contact Katy (k.pettit@bbk.ac.uk
Birkbeck Centre for Interdisciplinary Research on Mental Health (CIRMH) in partnership with the Raphael Samuel History Centre.
Contact name:
Katy Pettit