Men and Masculinities in Modern AfricaExtrait de la couverture : "Over the last twenty years, gender has become a major research focus in Africa studies, resulting in a surge of rich material. Yet men have rarely been the subject of gender research in Africa, and africanist scholars have yet to fully address how shifting meanings of gender have affected African men or how the understandings and practices of masculinity have been contested and transformed during the colonial and postcolonial eras. This collection is the firt to analyze the concepts and issues involved in exploring African men and the constructions of masculinity in sub-Saharan Africa. An introduction establishes the major themes of the anthology : -men as gendered actors -the social construction of masculinity -masculinity as a relational category hegemonic and subordinate masculinities This book challenges stereotypes of African men as savages, patriarchs, or emasculated colonial victims. Essays establish the centrality of gender to the social and political transformation of the 20th-centrury Africa. Chronologically and regionally diverse, the collection moves from the early colonial period through the era of independence and inclludes local studies throughtout the continent, as well as the work of both junior and senior scholars. Anyone interested in scholarship on gender and Africa will find this collection invaluable and thought provoking." |
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Page 92
Rather , speaking to me as a European , an outsider who reminded them of college principals and supervisors , these teachers tended to disclose versions of their lives that resembled Presbyterian masculinity . The ruptures and silences ...
Rather , speaking to me as a European , an outsider who reminded them of college principals and supervisors , these teachers tended to disclose versions of their lives that resembled Presbyterian masculinity . The ruptures and silences ...
Page 134
9 The argument about the peculiar nature of African modes of reproduction was now rebutted by the contention that workers — unlike other Africanstended to form families of a “ European type ” and adopt European culture — a tendency ...
9 The argument about the peculiar nature of African modes of reproduction was now rebutted by the contention that workers — unlike other Africanstended to form families of a “ European type ” and adopt European culture — a tendency ...
Page 148
It was particularly instrumental given the colonial government's insistence that African men did not support families and therefore did not qualify for wage increases and family allowances comparable to those earned by Europeans .
It was particularly instrumental given the colonial government's insistence that African men did not support families and therefore did not qualify for wage increases and family allowances comparable to those earned by Europeans .
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Contents
Challenging Senior Masculinity 3 31 | 9 |
Forsaking Their Fathers? Colonialism Christianity and Coming | 33 |
King Ahebi Ugbabe in the History | 52 |
Copyright | |
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