2013
DOI: 10.1093/ahr/118.1.104
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Phantoms of the Archive: Kwame Nkrumah, a Nazi Pilot Named Hanna, and the Contingencies of Postcolonial History-Writing

Abstract: IN MARCH 1962, AS THE WEST AFRICAN nation of Ghana marked five years of independence from British colonial rule, the country's most popular newspaper, the Daily Graphic, introduced readers to yet another in a long list of high-profile international visitors. This visitor, however, was not the usual diplomat, artistic performer, or anticolonial freedom fighter. A prominent headline and accompanying photo announced her as "The Woman Who Dares the Heavens." 1 And who was this daring woman? She was, according to t… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…As Jean Allman writes, a combination of "abrupt changes in state power, military rule, economic structural adjustment, and the underfunding of civil service and records management" have left many archives in a tenuous position. 22 Writing about her experience of research in Zimbabwe, Luise White reflected on these struggles: "[F]or reasons not unique to that country, nothing has been accessioned since 1984, and while a few documents from the early 1960s are available -nobody seems to know why -the archive stops in the late 1950s." 23 Thus, the materials in national archives -long the anchor for colonial historians' research -often obscure more than they clarify.…”
Section: Government Archives In Postcolonial Ugandamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Jean Allman writes, a combination of "abrupt changes in state power, military rule, economic structural adjustment, and the underfunding of civil service and records management" have left many archives in a tenuous position. 22 Writing about her experience of research in Zimbabwe, Luise White reflected on these struggles: "[F]or reasons not unique to that country, nothing has been accessioned since 1984, and while a few documents from the early 1960s are available -nobody seems to know why -the archive stops in the late 1950s." 23 Thus, the materials in national archives -long the anchor for colonial historians' research -often obscure more than they clarify.…”
Section: Government Archives In Postcolonial Ugandamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…During World War II, she worked as a typist in the Abwehr, the espionage group within the Third Reich's armed forces that Hitler disbanded toward the end of the war because of its internal subterfuge against his rule (Heimann, 1998). Her move to the tropics following World War II seems to parallel the movements of Nazi women closely associated with Hitler, such as Hannah Reitsch, the pilot and Iron Cross recipient who became close to Third World leader Kwame Nkrumah and helped establish Ghana's air force in the early years of independence (Allman, 2013). However, Harrisson's efforts were not directed by a confident futurism of a new nation-state but were a series of uncertain trials and error.…”
Section: Kristina Marie Lyonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The voices of the rebels remain inaudible, confirming ‘the differential exercise of power that makes some narratives possible and silences others’ (Trouillot : 25). It is here no doubt that contemporary historical practice requires historians to ‘creatively “read” the colonial archive both against and along the grain’ (Allman : 107). The trial archive contains ‘what would correspond to the assertion of some representation’, to borrow Ricoeur's terms (: 279), but is not sufficient for us to reconstruct the past; we can only glimpse the potential for research that would interpret colonial representations and, ultimately, produce its own current representations of past representations.…”
Section: Memories Of Slavery In the French Antilles: The Resources Ofmentioning
confidence: 99%