TY - JOUR
T1 - Indigenous cosmology, art forms and past medicinal practices
T2 - Towards an interpretation of ancient Koma Land sites in northern Ghana
AU - Kankpeyeng, Benjamin W.
AU - Nkumbaan, Samuel N.
AU - Insoll, Timothy
PY - 2011/8
Y1 - 2011/8
N2 - The ancient cultural tradition in the middle belt region of northern Ghana, with its stone circle and house mounds, contains varied material culture. The unique contextual arrangements of the material culture within the stone circle mounds and the diverse ceramic art forms, as well as their ethnographic analogues in West Africa, indicate the mounds' association with past shrines that have multiple functions, including curative purposes. The archaeology of the mounds and ethnographic associations related to past indigenous medical practices is reviewed and discussed. This paper will also consider how some of the figurines through which the Koma tradition has achieved 'fame' possibly functioned as physical representations of disease, perhaps underpinned by intentions of transference from afflicted to image. The notions of protection and healing are also examined with reference to the resorted and disarticulated human remains sometimes recovered from the sites.
AB - The ancient cultural tradition in the middle belt region of northern Ghana, with its stone circle and house mounds, contains varied material culture. The unique contextual arrangements of the material culture within the stone circle mounds and the diverse ceramic art forms, as well as their ethnographic analogues in West Africa, indicate the mounds' association with past shrines that have multiple functions, including curative purposes. The archaeology of the mounds and ethnographic associations related to past indigenous medical practices is reviewed and discussed. This paper will also consider how some of the figurines through which the Koma tradition has achieved 'fame' possibly functioned as physical representations of disease, perhaps underpinned by intentions of transference from afflicted to image. The notions of protection and healing are also examined with reference to the resorted and disarticulated human remains sometimes recovered from the sites.
KW - Ghana
KW - Koma
KW - cosmology
KW - figurines
KW - medicine
KW - shrines
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79961179797&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13648470.2011.591197
DO - 10.1080/13648470.2011.591197
M3 - Review article
C2 - 21810037
AN - SCOPUS:79961179797
SN - 1364-8470
VL - 18
SP - 205
EP - 216
JO - Anthropology and Medicine
JF - Anthropology and Medicine
IS - 2
ER -