Cultural Scripts for Asymmetrical Interactions in Ghana

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Nordic Journal of African Studies

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This paper focuses on expected communicative behaviors during asymmetrical interactional events among Ghanaians, with special reference to Ewes and Akans. Drawing on the ethno-pragmatic techniques of semantic explication and cultural scripts, it demonstrates how Ghanaian concepts of social hierarchy (roughly, the thought that some people are “above” others) in fluence verbal interaction. Five social categories that are prominent among Ghanaians in terms of age and social status are explicated to ensure a detailed description of individuals in such categories. Four cultural scripts are then posited to capture what is expected when one has to interact with someone thought of as “above” oneself. Some linguistic evidence is provided from Ewe and Akan, as well as from some other Ghanaian languages. The study attempts to show the possibility of describing some Ghanaian communicative norms in simple cross-translatable terms to enable non-Ghanaians to understand the viewpoint of cultural insiders.

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