What can the lives of women carrying goods through the markets of Accra teach us about resilience, identity and the future of Ghana?
In this episode of Indigenous Intelligence, I sit down with anthropologist Dr Laurian Bowles, author of the newly released book Headstrong: Women Porters, Blackness and Modernity in Accra.
We begin with Laurian's own story—her childhood, how anthropology found her, and how a first visit to Ghana in the 1990s sparked a journey that would eventually lead to more than a decade of research and relationship-building in Accra.
Together, we explore the lives of the kayayei (female head porters), examining the realities of migration, labour, belonging, Blackness and modernity in contemporary Ghana. We discuss what these women taught Laurian about resilience, dignity and community, and reflect on the challenge of preserving memory in a rapidly changing society.
This conversation goes beyond anthropology. It is an exploration of what we value, whose stories get told, and what we can learn from people whose lives are often hidden in plain sight.
Topics include:
• Ghana and social change
• The lives of the kayayei
• Blackness and identity
• Migration and belonging
• Memory and preservation
• Anthropology and storytelling
• Community, resilience and human flourishing
Listen, reflect and join the conversation.