Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu Explained

Birth Date:27 April 1938
Birth Place:Boston, Massachusetts, US
Death Place:Boston, Massachusetts
Workplaces:University of Ghana
Discipline:Linguist
Sub Discipline:Ghanaian languages
Thesis Title:A comparative study of Ga and Adangme with special reference to the verb
Thesis Year:1968
Thesis Url:https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/26205/
Birth Name:Mary Esther Kropp
Doctoral Advisor:David Dalby

Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu (27 April 1938, in Boston, Massachusetts – 17 November 2016, in Boston, Massachusetts) was an American linguist based in Ghana, known for her work on Ghanaian languages.[1] She was professor emerita at the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana, where she had been affiliated since 1964.

Education and career

Kropp Dakubu earned her M.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1962. In 1964 she was appointed a Research Fellow in the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana. She earned her PhD in West African Languages from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, in 1968, with a dissertation entitled, "A comparative study of Ga and Adangme with special reference to the verb."[2] [3] She returned to Ghana after completing her PhD, and spent the remainder of her career (and her life) at the University of Ghana. She was promoted to the rank of Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of African Studies in 1972, to Associate Professor in 1982, and to Full Professor in 1987. She was the Deputy Director of the Institute of African Studies from 1987 to 1989.[4] In July 2010, the University of Ghana appointed her Professor Emerita in recognition of her continued scholarship even in retirement.[5]

She dedicated her career to the study of Ghanaian languages, writing many linguistic studies of topics in individual Ghanaian languages, as well as editing a standard reference work on the Languages of Ghana.[6] She was an active member of the West African Linguistics Society, the then Linguistics Circle of Accra, and the Linguistics Association of Ghana.[7]

Notable achievements

Kropp Dakubu was a founding member (in 1967), along with Florence Dolphyne and others, of the Linguistic Circle of Accra, which later became the Linguistics Association of Ghana,[8] and she also served as President (1989–1993; 1996–2000) of the Linguistics Association of Ghana. She was the editor for the Papers in Ghanaian Linguistics which were the transactions of the Linguistic Circle of Accra and of the Ghana Journal of Linguistics, the journal of the Linguistics Association of Ghana. She was also a founding member of the West African Linguistics Society (WALS) which was established at Legon in 1965.

Throughout her long working life, she held visiting positions in many universities across the world, including NTNU Trondheim,[9] Indiana University, Hamburg University and Bayreuth University.

Selected publications

See also

References

  1. Ameka. Felix. 2017. In Memoriam: Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu. Journal of West African Linguistics. 44. 1.
  2. Book: Reclaiming the human sciences and humanities through African perspectives. 2012. Sub-Saharan Publishers. Lauer, Helen., Anyidoho, Kofi.. 978-9988-647-12-4. Accra, Ghana. lxiii. 798210564.
  3. A comparative study of Ga and Adangme with special reference to the verb. SOAS University of London. 1968. phd. en. M. E.. Kropp Dakubu.
  4. Web site: Past Directors and Deputies Institute of African Studies University of Ghana. ias.ug.edu.gh. 2020-03-08.
  5. Institute of African Studies. In Memory of Professor Emerita Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu, 1938-2016. Contemporary Journal of African Studies. 2017. 4. 2. 185–188. 10.4314/contjas.v4i2.8.
  6. Web site: Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu - Google Scholar Citations. scholar.google.com. 2020-03-08.
  7. In Memoriam: Emerita Professor Mary Esther Kropp Dakubu. Osam. E Kweku. Ghana Journal of Linguistics. 2016 . 5 . 1 . 10.4314/gjl.v5i1 . free.
  8. Book: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/history-of-african-linguistics/african-linguistics-in-official-englishspeaking-west-africa/919D54422697B895AEF129B17B27CB9C. African Linguistics in Official English-Speaking West Africa. Connell. Bruce. Akinlabi. Akinbiyi. A History of African Linguistics. 2019. A History of African Linguistics. 153–177. en. 10.1017/9781108283977.008. 9781108283977. 191874355 . 2020-03-08.
  9. Web site: The Legon Trondheim Linguistics Project - TypeCraft. typecraft.org. 2020-03-08.