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 212
As a result, these processes and their associated interventions have further
reinforced and rigidified the distinctions between Maasai as "traditional" and
others (whether British colonial administrators or Tanzanian elites) as "modern.
As a result, these processes and their associated interventions have further
reinforced and rigidified the distinctions between Maasai as "traditional" and
others (whether British colonial administrators or Tanzanian elites) as "modern.
Page 216
century, which, together with the ensuing famine and wars between Maasai
sections, decimated their livestock herds and killed large numbers of Maa
speakers (Waller 1988; Hodgson 2001a). Haunted by images of Maasai as
dangerous ...
century, which, together with the ensuing famine and wars between Maasai
sections, decimated their livestock herds and killed large numbers of Maa
speakers (Waller 1988; Hodgson 2001a). Haunted by images of Maasai as
dangerous ...
Page 221
that which had been defined and stigmatized for years by Maasai and colonial
administrators as not Maasai destabilized the dominant masculinity. And as the
scope and pace of interventions in Maasai life increased, the meaning of ormeek
...
that which had been defined and stigmatized for years by Maasai and colonial
administrators as not Maasai destabilized the dominant masculinity. And as the
scope and pace of interventions in Maasai life increased, the meaning of ormeek
...
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Contents
Men and Masculinities in Modern African History | 1 |
Challenging Senior Masculinity | 9 |
Forsaking Their Fathers? Colonialism Christianity and Coming | 33 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
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Abetifi African History African police African Studies Ahebi Ugbabe Akan Allman Asante Asantehene authority Basel Mission became black policemen boys breadwinner British Cambridge Christian Colliery colonial Compol context culinity cultural Date-Ba Decompol domestic dominant masculinity economic elite Enugu Enugu-Ezike European family allowances fathers female Ghana hegemonic Heinemann Hodgson household husbands ideals identities Igala Igbo Igboland interview Journal of African junior Keith Shear Kenya Kikuyu king Kwawu Lagos Lindsay lives London Maasai Maasai masculinity male elders marriage married masked spirit Mau Mau men's Miescher migrant Mission missionaries modern Muslim Nairobi Namibia native Nigeria notions of masculinity Nsukka officials Opusuo ormeek Ovambo Ovamboland political Presbyterian railway religious role senior masculinity sexual Sidibe social society South African status Swahili teachers tion University Press urban veterans village wage labor warrant chief wife wives woman women workers Yaa Asantewaa Yoruba young youngmen