
New Books Network Jeanne-Marie Jackson, "The Letter of the Law in J. E. Casely Hayford's West Africa" (Princeton UP, 2026)
Mar 31, 2026
Jeanne-Marie Jackson, Professor of English at Johns Hopkins and director of a humanities institute, explores J. E. Casely Hayford’s legal-literary imagination. She traces his formation in the Gold Coast and Britain. Short, vivid discussions cover his institutions, public persona, textual vs oral traditions, law as literary practice, and how close reading functioned as legislative power.
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Casely Hayford's Hybrid Legal-Textual Formation
- J.E. Casely Hayford combined elite British legal training with deep local textual traditions to shape Gold Coast public life.
- Born 1866 in Anamabu, educated at Peterhouse Cambridge and Inner Temple, he returned to lead institutions and law reform.
Institution Builder Across Local And Imperial Scales
- Casely Hayford founded major civic and pan‑African institutions that linked local elites and chiefs to imperial politics.
- He co-founded the Aborigines Rights Protection Society (1897), Gold Coast Leader (1902) and the National Congress of British West Africa (1920).
The Kente Suit Story Reveals Self Fashioning
- Casely Hayford adopted the combined surname Casely Hayford and sometimes used Ekra Achiman to manage identity across Gold Coast and Cambridge contexts.
- His grandson Joe recalled Hayford wearing kente at Peterhouse yet tailored British suits back home, a deliberate chameleonic self-fashioning.



