CGHH PhD student Ben Walker recounts his archival
fieldwork in Ghana, with tips for researchers
'Making Friends and Acknowledging People: Five Lessons
from the Archives of the History of Medicine in Ghana' by B. B. Walker
Searching through the archives for material to put
together a history of medicine in Ghana can be a challenge. Getting the right
letter from the right person or physically locating the archive for example, can
often involve a far greater effort than actually reading the documents
themselves.
Unlike for histories of Europe and North America,
Ghana’s historical record is not to be found in vast libraries of catalogued
papers (though it must be noted, the Balme Library at the University of Ghana
has an excellent stock of a wide range of government, media and academic
publications). Its past is in people’s homes, in their funeral brochures, in
church storerooms and in obscure corners of hospitals. This is not because
Ghana is more ‘primitive’ but because it has not had the stable institutional
capacity to maintain a full national archive since the years of its
independence from British rule in 1957. Coups, economic collapses and
revolutions have led to the loss of large swathes of written material.
The research may be more physically grueling but it is
no less rewarding. Ghana’s records are a patchwork, but no less worthwhile or
valid than any of the red ribbon-tied bundles one might find at the British
National Archives in Kew. For those who wish to try it for themselves, here are
five key tips:
1) Get
Signatures: To get into PRAAD (Public Relations and Archives Administration
Department of Ghana) you will need a signature on an official archive document
in order to be allowed in. This signature can best be obtained from a friendly
academic colleague at the University of Ghana. It cannot be obtained from the
British High Commission (yes, I tried). You may have the option to try to get
the form in advance and have a Head of Department from your own institution
sign it, although I cannot vouch for this route.
2) Make
Friends: Your best pathway to understanding anything about the country of which
you are researching is to get to know the people and fellow researchers. Ghana
is no different. My research would have been much more problematic had I not
received help at every turn by incredibly kind Ghanaian academics, students,
librarians, businessmen, solicitors, fashion designers, doctors and hoteliers.
Not only will this likely facilitate your only access beyond the national
archive storehouses, it will make the whole thing make far more sense and be
far more fun.
3)
Interview, interview, interview: I conducted many interviews with many
elderly Ghanaian doctors and clerics, each of them with their own surprising
and important insights. Obviously the aim is not to take on their opinions as
your own. Sometimes these interviews tell one far more about present concerns
than about past ones. Nevertheless, actually talking to people involved is
vital if one is to get a sense of what is beyond the written record, what has
been hidden and what was never recorded on paper. By listening to the voices of
individuals historians can counter the claims of the powerful to control the
national past.
4) Go West:
Many of Ghana’s best-written historical material can be found in the UK and the
US, even material after the end of colonialism. Copies were made and stored
more effectively and systematically. As Jean Allman recently emphasised in her
article on Ghana’s archives on the Nazi Pilot named Hanna, a history of Ghana
requires travelling all across the world.[1]
5) Tip and
Acknowledge: Making friends with local librarians and taxi drivers, both of
whom are vital to any good historical work often requires good tipping and
payment. Buy gifts for those who help you out. Pay when you are given
photocopies. Many of these people have little money. Don’t forget about their
real lives beyond the archive. Secondly, there are terrible historical
relations between European researchers and African communities because of
broken promises in the pursuit of information. If you promise something,
deliver it. If you publish something, send it to the people that helped you and
of course, acknowledge them. Finally, don’t forget that you are a guest.
Overall, the value of the archives (whether in the
sense that one might expect or not) to be found in Ghana far outweighs the
difficulty of accessing them and connecting to their keepers. They can shed
light on histories that have for too long remained disclosed, submerged in
imperial and post-imperial narratives constructed from the records of the
powerful. Whether or not you ever choose to study Ghana, the principle can be
generalised. Attempting to uncover hidden histories matters if scholars are to
continue confronting the assumptions of their audiences and to extend their own
understanding beyond previous expectations. If we do not, we will continue to
misunderstand, misinterpret and demean cultures and pasts which look unlike our
own.
[1] Jean Allman, “Modeling Modernity: The Brief Story of Kwame Nkrumah, a Nazi
Pilot Named Hanna, and the Wonders of Motorless Flight.” In Peter Bloom,
Takyiwaa Manuh, and Stephan Miescher, eds. Modernization as Spectacle. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press,
2014, 229-43.
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