Changing meanings: The Ghanaian memorial stool of the KwaZulu-Natal Museum

This article examines the historical context in which the so-called “Ashanti Golden Stool” was acquired as an iconic artefact for the new Natal Museum in the first decade of the 20th century, the heyday of imperialism.

The multi-layered symbolism surrounding the stool and the importance of chiefly stools as symbols of authority in Ghana are explored. The role of the donor, Sir Matthew Nathan, governor of Natal and former governor of the Gold Coast (Ghana), in obtaining the stool and the West African collection for the museum is discussed in the context of inter-colonial imperialism. The history of the memorial stool provides a case study for historians examining artefacts of material culture as sources of historical knowledge.

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The effects of an administrative and policy vacuum on access to archives in South Africa

Open access to information is an essential tool for combating inefficiency in the machinery of state and for the assertion of human rights.

Access to archives is essential for ensuring long-term accountability and the learning of lessons from past events and past errors. Despite the constitutional and administrative importance of open access to archives, the sector is largely ignored in South African government policy formulation, although in-depth information and extensive recommendations are available on the subject, beginning with recommendations made by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 1998. This article focuses on a report entitled State of the Archives: An analysis of South Africa’s national archival system, 2014, and contrasts this document with the almost complete neglect of the National Archives in the Draft White Paper on Arts, Culture and Heritage published for comment in November 2016 and more recently in mid-2017. It is argued that one of the State of the Archives weaknesses is that it looks at the “national archival system” and especially the National Archives of South Africa, in and of itself, while insufficient attention is paid to the National Archives as a functioning component within the greater bureaucratic machinery. It is further argued that there is a close correlation between the state of a National Archives and the state of a national government bureaucracy. In this context, a repositioning of archives to align the sector better in terms of the objectives of the National Development Plan and the exercise of constitutional rights is recommended.

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