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African Pharmakon

The Asylum as Shrine from Slavery to the Return

African Pharmakon

The Asylum as Shrine from Slavery to the Return

Explores how psychiatry in Ghana was never just about medicine; it was about migration, exile, and the politics of who gets to stay and who must be cast out.
 
For centuries, mental distress in West Africa has been subject to a mix of healing, harming, ritual, and regulation. In African Pharmakon, Nana Osei Quarshie questions conventional narratives about colonial psychiatry. Instead of displacing African therapeutic traditions, he argues, European psychiatric institutions in fact built upon them, adapting long-standing techniques of social control and healing.
 
With a focus on Ghana, Quarshie explores the shifting landscape of West African mental health practices, tracking their transformation from shrine-based rituals to colonial asylums and modern psychiatric institutions. Combining extensive archival research and ethnographic fieldwork, including the first scholarly examination of patient records from the Accra Psychiatric Hospital, Quarshie identifies five enduring techniques that have shaped the treatment of mental distress: spiritual pawning, logging, manhunting, mass expulsion, and pharmacotherapy.
 
Rejecting the simplistic opposition of Indigenous healing versus colonial oppression, African Pharmakon provides a nuanced account of how psychiatric care in Ghana became a tool of empowerment as well as exclusion. This pioneering study reframes our understanding of psychiatry and mental health governance in West Africa, past and present.
 

328 pages | 28 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2025

Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology

History: African History, General History

History of Science

Reviews

African Pharmakon offers a deep and powerful rethinking of West African mental health from the birth of the Black Atlantic to the present. Quarshie’s novel analytic, the mind politic, is an absolutely precious gift.”

Julie Livingston, New York University

“In this compelling and historically rich account, Quarshie shows how the West African ‘pharmakon’ became entangled with—or even codified into—colonial and postcolonial law, migration policy, and psychiatric care.”

Claire Wendland, University of Wisconsin–Madison

“With African Pharmakon, Quarshie greatly expands the field of the history of madness. He makes it diasporic, he crosses historical time periods, and he calls us to fundamentally rethink histories of confinement and capture in new and exciting ways.”

Abena Dove Osseo-Asare, University of Texas at Austin

Table of Contents

Introduction: West African Pharmakon
1. Spiritual Pawning in Atlantic West Africa
Mammy Water
2. Asylum as Shrine in the Gold Coast Colony
Kaaŋaaɗo, the Hunter
3. Political Lunacy and Migration to Asante
Akla-Osu, Ghana’s SUPERLANDLORD
4. Consciencism as Crisis in Independent Ghana
The Congregant
5. Mass Expulsion for a Spiritual Revolution
Conclusion: The Recrudescent Pharmakon

Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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