Decolonising Mind and Being Associated with Marriage: Perspectives from Ghana

dc.contributor.authorAdjei, S.B.
dc.contributor.authorMpiani, A.
dc.date.accessioned2024-08-02T14:25:38Z
dc.date.available2024-08-02T14:25:38Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.descriptionResearch Articleen_US
dc.description.abstractColonialism 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 dominance, persistent 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 and 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 inferiorization of African traditional marriage practices are corollaries of colonial and metacolonial 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 resulted from colonisation. A decolonial psychological science that enables critical consciousness and serves as a necessary catalyst for liberating minds and beings is thus required.en_US
dc.identifier.otherDOI: 10.1177/09713336231152311
dc.identifier.urihttps://ugspace.ug.edu.gh/handle/123456789/42217
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherPsychology and Developing Societiesen_US
dc.subjectColonialityen_US
dc.subjectdecolonising knowledgeen_US
dc.subjectpsychologyen_US
dc.titleDecolonising Mind and Being Associated with Marriage: Perspectives from Ghanaen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US

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