Consulting the Things of the Spirits: Evidencing Unseen Presences in Missionary Collections
Publication date
2025-04
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
taverne
Abstract
Contributing to current efforts to grapple with museums' colonial legacies, this article takes the question of evidence as an entry point to unlock the multi-layered make-up of African spiritual artifacts in missionary collections. Focussing on Dutch and German missionary collections of legbawo and dzokawo from the Ewe region in Ghana and Togo, we analyze how such artifacts were subjected to “practices of evidencing” by multiple parties over a span of 120 years. These collections enshrine coexisting, clashing ways of evidencing: multiple possibilities of knowing (about) the items, their trajectories, and their relations with humans and other-than-human beings. Next to analyzing the missionary and museal frames imposed on these artifacts, we investigate contemporary Ewe religious practitioners' ritual technologies of knowing about the presence, identities, and wishes of spirits as alternative modes of evidencing unseen presences. Pluralizing evidencing, we argue, offers opportunities for decolonial critique and rethinking established museum and research frameworks.
Keywords
Ewe spiritual artifacts, collaborative research, decolonial critique, evidencing, missionary collections from Africa, Anthropology, Museology
Citation
de Witte, M & Meyer, B 2025, 'Consulting the Things of the Spirits : Evidencing Unseen Presences in Missionary Collections', Museum Anthropology, vol. 48, no. 1, e70002. https://doi.org/10.1111/muan.70002