ABSTRACT

This book explores privacy practices and the role of digital technologies in the lives of urban Ghanaians, considering how they use language, materiality, and culture to maintain sharp boundaries between the private and public. Focusing on the harbour town of Tema, it offers rich ethnographic portraits that cover topics such as nightlife, domestic architecture, religion, and social media. The volume demonstrates how transformations across Africa such as Pentecostal reformation, neoliberal reforms, and rapid digitisation all raise the need for privacy among middle-class urbanites who use brand new (and very traditional) strategies to uphold an image of their economic or religious state. Overall the book highlights how digital technologies intertwine with local cultures and histories, and how digital anthropology enhances our understanding of the offline as much as the online. It makes a valuable contribution to discourse about the right for privacy and surveillance in the digital age, and will be of interest to scholars from anthropology and African studies.

chapter |22 pages

1Introduction

Studying privacy, digital anthropology, and Pentecostalism

chapter 2|15 pages

Method and reflection

chapter |21 pages

3Setting the field

People, place, language, and technology

chapter 4|27 pages

Treasures of darkness

Nightlife & surveillance

chapter |35 pages

5Hidden and incomplete

Middle-Class houses

chapter 6|37 pages

In a relationship with God

The discretness of Social Media

chapter 7|13 pages

Conclusions

Towards an ethnography of privacy