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E-grāmata: Political Myth-making, Nationalist Resistance and Populist Performance: Examining Kwame Nkrumah's Construction and Promotion of the African Dream

(University of the West of England, UK)
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"Using the socio-political discourse of Kwame Nkrumah, a pioneering Pan-Africanist and Ghana's independence leader, Nartey investigates the notion of political myth-making in a context underexplored in the literature. He examines Nkrumah's construction of a myth described in the book as the Unite or Perish myth (i.e. the idea of a 'United States of Africa' being a prerequisite for the survival of Africa in the post-independence period), exploring the rhetorical resources he deployed, categorizing and analyzing key tropes and metaphors, and setting out the myth's basic components"--

Using the socio-political discourse of Kwame Nkrumah, a pioneering Pan-Africanist and Ghana’s independence leader, Nartey investigates the notion of political myth-making in a context underexplored in the literature.



Using the socio-political discourse of Kwame Nkrumah, a pioneering Pan-Africanist and Ghana’s independence leader, Nartey investigates the notion of political myth-making in a context underexplored in the literature. He examines Nkrumah’s construction of a myth described in the book as the Unite or Perish myth (i.e., the idea of a ‘United States of Africa’ being a prerequisite for the survival of Africa in the post-independence period), exploring the rhetorical resources he deployed, categorizing and analyzing key tropes and metaphors, and setting out the myth’s basic components.

This book focuses on three areas: an investigation of political myth-making as a social and discursive practice in order to identify particular semiotic practices and linguistic patterns deployed in the construction of mythic discourse; the unpacking of the discursive manifestation, representation, features, and functions of political mythic themes; and finally to propose and implement an integrated discourse analytical framework to account for the complexities of mythic discourse and political narratives in general. It analyzes how Nkrumah deployed his discourse to concurrently construct heroes and villains, protagonists and antagonists, as part of an ideological mechanism aimed at galvanizing support for and instigating action on the part of the masses towards his lifelong African dream.

Nartey’s book steps out from the conventional domain of critical discourse studies to focus on myth as a form of populist performance. It will be of interest to postgraduate students and academics in (critical) discourse studies, rhetorical discourse analysis, African and Diaspora studies, and African history, as well as non-academics such as journalists, political commentators, and people who consider themselves to be Nkrumaists and Pan-Africanists.

List of tables
x
Acknowledgments xi
1 Introduction
1(4)
References
3(2)
2 Discourse and Mythology
5(24)
2.1 Political Mythology in the Modern World: Functions, Uses, and Types
5(5)
2.2 Previous Research on Political Myths
10(4)
2.3 The Research Gap
14(1)
2.4 Metaphor and Mythic Discourse
15(3)
2.5 A Historical and Political Overview of Ghana's Contact with British Colonialism
18(4)
2.6 Kwame Nkrumah's Role in African Nationalism
22(2)
2.7 Summary
24(1)
Notes
24(1)
References
25(4)
3 Analytical and Methodological Procedures
29(16)
3.1 Analytic Framework
29(2)
3.2 Tool Utilized for Linguistic Analysis
31(2)
3.3 Tool Utilized for Discourse-Historical Analysis
33(1)
3.4 Tools Utilized for Corpus Analysis
34(3)
3.4.1 Frequency Analysis
34(1)
3.4.2 Collocation Analysis
35(1)
3.4.3 Concordance Analysis
36(1)
3.5 Textual and Contextual Resources Utilized for Analysis
37(1)
3.6 Dataset
38(3)
3.7 Summary
41(1)
Notes
41(1)
References
42(3)
4 The Unite or Perish Myth as a Discourse of Nationalist Resistance
45(45)
Overview
45(2)
4.1 The Conspiratorial Enemy
47(11)
4.2 The Valiant Leader
58(12)
4.3 The Noble Revolutionary
70(10)
4.4 The Messiah
80(7)
4.5 Summary
87(1)
Notes
87(1)
References
87(3)
5 Metaphor and the Unite or Perish Myth
90(46)
Overview
90(1)
5.1 African Independence as War
91(13)
5.1.1 Metaphors of Attack and Defense
94(5)
5.1.2 Metaphors of Struggle
99(5)
5.2 Colonialism/Neo-colonialism as a Religious/Moral Construct
104(9)
5.2.1 Metaphors that Conceptualize the Malice of Colonialism
104(6)
5.2.2 Metaphors that Portray the `Righteous' Intentions of Nkrumah
110(3)
5.3 Political Concepts and Entities as Humans
113(11)
5.3.1 The Personification of Colonialism/Neo-colonialism
114(4)
5.3.2 The Personification of Africa
118(6)
5.4 African Unity as a Journey to Freedom and Prosperity
124(7)
5.5 Summary
131(1)
Notes
132(1)
References
133(3)
6 The Unite or Perish Myth as Populist Performance
136(37)
Overview
136(1)
6.1 Nomination and Predication of Social Actors and Actions
137(10)
6.2 Construction of a Man of the People Image
147(9)
6.3 Exploitation of Familiarity and Historical Memory
156(7)
6.4 Emotionalized Blame Attribution
163(5)
6.5 Summary
168(1)
Note
169(1)
References
169(4)
7 Conclusion
173(10)
7.1 Summary of Findings
173(3)
7.2 Implications, Limitations, and Further Research
176(4)
7.3 Closing Remarks
180(2)
References
182(1)
Index 183
Mark Nartey is Lecturer in English Language and Linguistics at the Bristol Centre for Linguistics, University of the West of England. He studied in Ghana, Norway, and Hong Kong. He is an interdisciplinary scholar who specializes in corpus-assisted discourse studies, with a focus on issues at the intersection of language, culture, and society. He investigates how people deploy language in specific spatiotemporal and socio-cultural contexts to achieve various aims, including identity construction, self-promotion, and othering as well as argumentation, resistance, and (de)legitimation. He has published extensively in applied linguistics, discourse analysis, and communication/media studies.