For many Africanist historians, traditional religion is simply a
starting point for measuring the historic impact of Christianity
and Islam. In Tongnaab, Jean Allman and John Parker challenge the
distinction between tradition and modernity by tracing the movement
and mutation of the powerful Talensi god and ancestor shrine,
Tongnaab, from the savanna of northern Ghana through the forests
and coastal plains of the south. Using a wide range of written,
oral, and iconographic sources, Allman and Parker uncover the
historical dynamics of cross-cultural religious belief and
practice. They reveal how Tongnaab has been intertwined with many
themes and events in West African history the slave trade, colonial
conquest and rule, capitalist agriculture and mining, labor
migration, shifting ethnicities, the production of ethnographic
knowledge, and the political projects that brought about the modern
nation state. This rich and original book shows that indigenous
religion has been at the center of dramatic social and economic
changes stretching from the slave trade to the tourist trade."
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