Misrecognition in the making of a state: Ghana’s international relations under Kwame Nkrumah

Main author: Gallagher, Julia
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-26330
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
topic JQ Political institutions (Asia, Africa, Australia)
JZ International relations
description This paper draws on a Kleinian psychoanalytic reading of Hegel’s theory of the struggle for recognition to explore the role of international misrecognition in the creation of state subjectivity. It focuses on Ghana’s early years, when international relations were powerfully conceptualised and used by Kwame Nkrumah in his bid to bring coherence to a fragile infant state. Nkrumah attempted to create separation and independence from the West on the one hand, and intimacy with a unified Africa on the other. By creating juxtapositions between Ghana and these idealised international others, he was able to create a fantasy of a coherent state, built on a fundamental misrecognition of the wider world. As the fantasy bumped up against the realities of Ghana’s failing economy, fractured social structures and complex international relationships, it foundered, causing alienation and despair. I argue that the failure of this early fantasy was the start of Ghana’s quest to begin processes of individuation and subjectivity, and that its undoing was an inevitable part of the early stages of misrecognition, laying the way for more grounded struggles for recognition and the development of a more complex state-subjectivity.
format Journal Article
author Gallagher, Julia
author_facet Gallagher, Julia
authorStr Gallagher, Julia
author_letter Gallagher, Julia
title Misrecognition in the making of a state: Ghana’s international relations under Kwame Nkrumah
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2018
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/26330/