This paper is based on conversations and observations made during anthropological fieldwork conducted in a rural town in southern Ghana. The author views funerals as a form of care which a family provides for old people after death. Both old and younger members of a family regard a fitting funeral as indispensable to mark the life of a person as successful. It is a family's responsibility to arrange a funeral. The author attempts to understand the meaning of funerals for older people, and draws attention to a common discrepancy between the grandness of funeral celebrations and the poor quality of care and moral support which old people enjoy from kin during the last years of their lives. He concludes that funerals are less a matter of showi...
Studies have suggested that in African countries, symptoms of cognitive decline are commonly seen as...
<p>An African funeral is a very social event for the entire community in which the deceased li...
This reflection discusses six contributions to a special issue on the care and well-being of older p...
Two principles underlie the attitude towards elderly people and their care in the Akan culture of Gh...
What connects people of all cultures, regardless of how or where people are born, is the reality tha...
Elder care has become a significant national conversation in Ghana due to urban and international mi...
Over the years, family and community ties in Ghana have been a major guarantor of support provision ...
Across the life course, culture is never more evident than at the end of life. Due to the great vari...
This study examines the economic aspects of death and funeral celebration in the Akan town of Ayireb...
In contemporary Ghana, adult children are considered responsible for the care of aged parents. Withi...
In rural towns of Ghana’s Eastern Region, older adults express curiosity about Western facilities fo...
Ageing as a natural process leads one gradually to a life’s stage where one becomes frail and elderl...
People in Kwahu-Tafo, a rural town in Southern Ghana, regard a peaceful death as a ‘good death’. ‘Pe...
Population trends are indicative that by 2050, 10% of Ghana’s population will be above 60 years. Ye...
This empirical study uses qualitative methods to investigate experiences of bereavement after the de...
Studies have suggested that in African countries, symptoms of cognitive decline are commonly seen as...
<p>An African funeral is a very social event for the entire community in which the deceased li...
This reflection discusses six contributions to a special issue on the care and well-being of older p...
Two principles underlie the attitude towards elderly people and their care in the Akan culture of Gh...
What connects people of all cultures, regardless of how or where people are born, is the reality tha...
Elder care has become a significant national conversation in Ghana due to urban and international mi...
Over the years, family and community ties in Ghana have been a major guarantor of support provision ...
Across the life course, culture is never more evident than at the end of life. Due to the great vari...
This study examines the economic aspects of death and funeral celebration in the Akan town of Ayireb...
In contemporary Ghana, adult children are considered responsible for the care of aged parents. Withi...
In rural towns of Ghana’s Eastern Region, older adults express curiosity about Western facilities fo...
Ageing as a natural process leads one gradually to a life’s stage where one becomes frail and elderl...
People in Kwahu-Tafo, a rural town in Southern Ghana, regard a peaceful death as a ‘good death’. ‘Pe...
Population trends are indicative that by 2050, 10% of Ghana’s population will be above 60 years. Ye...
This empirical study uses qualitative methods to investigate experiences of bereavement after the de...
Studies have suggested that in African countries, symptoms of cognitive decline are commonly seen as...
<p>An African funeral is a very social event for the entire community in which the deceased li...
This reflection discusses six contributions to a special issue on the care and well-being of older p...