Negotiating Nationalism Through Ghanaian Contemporary Art Music: The Creative Patriotism of Ephraim Amu
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University of Ghana
Abstract
The emergence of nationalism in Ghana, formerly the Gold Coast, stemmed from resistance to
British hegemony and imperialism paralleling similar movements in other West-African
countries such as Nigeria and Liberia. Realising the need for cultural liberation and
emancipation, West-African elite such as J. B. Danquah, J. E. Casely-Hayford, Ako Adjei, and
Kwame Nkrumah inspired nationalist sentiments and led the fight for independence in the Gold
Coast that was created as a synthesis of different ethnic cultures in West Africa through
colonisation. As a contribution of their quota to the struggle, a number of African art music
composers, for instance, Isaac D. Riverson, Joseph E. Allotey-Pappoe, Philip Gbeho, etc.,
attempted to decolonise music in the Gold Coast through their approaches to contemporary art
music that could satisfactorily mediate the boundaries between the Africans’ surge towards
Europeanism and their obsession for Africanism. However, the sui generis of Ephraim Amu has
established a creative framework that has profoundly influenced subsequent generations of Ghanaian
contemporary art music composers idealised for mediating collective cultural awakening in the
country. Scholars acknowledge the potencies of Amu’s innovative approaches but have taken
for granted why the genre negotiates nationalism within the universe of ethnic and linguistic
synthesis. Therefore, by interrogating the sociopolitical events of the Gold Coast, institutional
contributions, agencies of cultural negotiation, traits of development, etc., through qualitative
research methodologies and the conceptual frameworks of Critical Sankofaism and Imagined
Communities, the study posits that Ephraim Amu as culture intellectual and creative patriot
engenders a community of African and/or Ghanaian contemporary art music by consolidating
sociopolitical and religious sentiments and themes into a genre, capable of providing a medium
for collective national expressions and the realisation of Culture-Self, hitherto, defining a
political unit.
Description
PhD. Music
