African Gender Studies

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Author: Oyeronke Oyewumi

ISBN-10: 1403962839

ISBN-13: 9781403962836

Category: African Studies

This is the first comprehensive reader that brings African experiences to bear on the ongoing global discussions of women, gender, and society. Bringing together the essential writing on this topic from the last 25 years, these essays discuss gender in Africa from a multi-disciplinary perspective. With a theoretical and conceptual focus, African Gender Studies will inform debate in African Studies, Women's Studies, History, Sociology and Anthropology.

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This is the first comprehensive reader that brings African experiences to bear on the ongoing global discussions of women, gender, and society. Bringing together the essential writing on this topic from the last 25 years, these essays discuss gender in Africa from a multi-disciplinary perspective. With a theoretical and conceptual focus, African Gender Studies will inform debate in African Studies, Women's Studies, History, Sociology and Anthropology.

1Visualizing the body : Western theories and African subjects32Spirituality, gender, and power in Asante history233Bringing African women into the classroom : rethinking pedagogy and epistemology514Decolonizing feminism675Theorizing matriarchy in Africa : kinship ideologies and systems in Africa and Europe836(Re)constituting the cosmology and sociocultural institutions of Oyo - Yoruba997Ko Sohun ti Mbe ti o Nitan (nothing is that lacks a [hi]story) : on Oyeronke Oyewumi's The invention of women1218Women's roles and existential identities1279Revisiting "woman-woman marriage" : notes on Gikuyu women14510Making history, creating gender : some methodological and interpretive questions in the writing of Oyo oral traditions16911Gender biases in African historiography20712Senegalese women in politics : a portrait of two female leaders, Arame Diene and Thioumbe Samb, 1945-199623313Miscegenation as metonymy : sexuality and power in the colonial novel24514Gender, feminist theory, and post-colonial (women's) writing25915The hidden history of women in Ghanaian print culture27916Definitions of women and development : an African perspective29917An investigative framework for gender research in Africa in the new millennium31318The Yum : an indigenous model for sustainable development33319In my father's house : epilogue34120Questions of identity and inheritance : a critical review of Kwame Anthony Appiah's In my father's house355

\ From the Publisher\ "This book is a must read for scholars and activists, interested in the post-modern debate on Gender Studies in Africa. The multi-disciplinary essays provide timely, refreshing and provocative illustrations of the philosophical and epistemological complexities, challenges and dilemmas endemic to universal theory building. It is a constructive critique of the flaws, inherent in Eurocentric and androcentric scholarship that have dominated studies of gender in Africa and represents a culmination of the process of deconstruction and revision. The contributors successfully interject African-based concepts, explanatory paradigms and experiential knowledge into the various strands of the dominant feminist discourse."--Filomina Steady, Wellesley College\ "For the diversity and renown of its authors as well as the breadth of its topical coverage, this book deserves a wide reading. Its subject matter, African gender studies, is important not only for Africa but also for its ability to affect both the discourse about and action on global issues dealing with gender, 'development,' and social and economic justice. " -- Cheryl Johnson-Odim, Dean, School of Liberal Arts & Sciences, Columbia College, Chicago and author of For Women and the Nation: Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti of Nigeria.\ "This collection should be read by all interested in a truly international gender analysis and feminist theory and scholarship."--Rhoda Reddock, The University of the West Indies and author of Women, Labour and Politics in Trinidad and Tobago: A History\ "[African Gender Studies] is a timely addition to the growing literature on the subject and will be a welcome addition to scholars, activists, students and a wider public, particularly across Africa "--Takyiwaa Manuh, University of Ghana, Legon\ \ \ \