Gendering Ethnicity in African Women’s Lives - Women in Africa and the Diaspora - Jan Bender Shetler - Libros - University of Wisconsin Press - 9780299303945 - 30 de mayo de 2015
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Gendering Ethnicity in African Women’s Lives - Women in Africa and the Diaspora

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The elegists, ancient Rome's most introspective poets, filled their works with vivid, first-person accounts of dreams. Emma Scioli examines these varied and visually striking textual dreamscapes, arguing that the poets exploited dynamics of visual representation to share with readers the intensely personal experience of dreaming.


Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Table of Contents: Acknowledgments Introduction: Women's Alternative Practices of Ethnicity in Africa Jan Bender Shetler Part I Forming Interethnic Alliances 1 Gendering the History of Social Memory in the Mara Region, Tanzania, as an Antidote to "Tribal" History Jan Bender Shetler 2 Living Ethnicity: Gender, Livelihood, and Ethnic Identity in Mozambique Heidi Gengenbach Part II Constructing New Forms of Identity 3 Re-reading the 1835 "Fingo Emancipation" Women and Ethnicity in the Colonial Archive Poppy Fry 4 New African Marriage and Panethnic Politics in Segregationist South Africa Meghan Healy-Clancy 5 Women and Non-ethnic Politics in East Africa, 1934-1947 Ethan R. Sanders Part III Promoting Gendered Domains of Ethnicity 6 Gender and the Limits of "Ndebeleness," 1910-1960s: Abezansi Churchwomen's Domestic and Associational Alliances Wendy Urban-Mead 7 "Women Were Not Supposed to Fight" The Gendered Uses of Martial and Moral Zuluness during uDlame, 1990-1994 Jill E. Kelly 8 Sorting and Suffering: Social Classification in Postgenocide Rwanda Jennie E. Burnet Part IV Performing Gendered Ethnic Power 9 Matriliny, Masculinity, and Contested Gendered Definitions of Ethnic Identity and Power in Nineteenth-Century Southeastern Nigeria Ndubueze L. Mbah 10 Shaming Men, Performing Power: Female Authority in Zimbabwe and Tanzania on the Eve of Colonial Rule Heike I. Schmidt 11 Muslim Women Legislators in Postcolonial Kenya: Between Gender, Ethnicity, and Religion Ousseina D. Alidou Afterword: Reflections on Gender, Ethnicity, and Power Dorothy L. Hodgson Suggestions for Further Reading Contributors IndexReview Quotes: "An important, original, and timely anthology bringing a feminist scholarly perspective to the workings of ethnicity and women's lives in Africa."--Victoria Bernal, University of California, IrvineReview Quotes: "This volume fills a long-overdue need for a book-length treatment of the nexus of gender and ethnicity."--Monica Udvardy, University of KentuckyReview Quotes: "For the historian, these musings on sources, memory, and historiographic silences provide a highly stimulating invitation to rethink our approach to the history of identity in Africa. A very fine historically nuanced collection."--Barbara M. Cooper, Rutgers UniversityReview Quotes: "A critical contribution to our understanding of the creation and practice of ethnicity in African societies."--Elizabeth Schmidt, Loyola University MarylandBiographical Note: Jan Bender Shetler is a professor of history at Goshen College. She is the author of "Imagining Serengeti "and "Telling Our Own Stories: Local Histories from South Mara, Tanzania."Publisher Marketing: Do African men and women think about and act out their ethnicity in different ways? Most studies of ethnicity in Africa consider men's experiences, but rarely have scholars examined whether women have the same idea of what it means to be, for example, Igbo or Tswana or Kikuyu. Or, studies have invoked the adage "women have no tribe" to indicate a woman's loss of ethnicity as she marries into her husband's community. This volume engages directly the issue of women's ethnicity and makes stimulating contributions to debates about how and why women's movements have a unifying role in African political organization and peace movements. Drawing on extensive field research in many different regions of Africa, the contributors demonstrate in their essays that women do make choices about the forms of ethnicity they embrace, creating alternatives to male-centered definitions-in some cases rejecting a specific ethnic identity in favor of an interethnic alliance, in others reinterpreting the meaning of ethnicity within gendered domains, and in others performing ethnic power in gendered ways. Their analysis helps explain why African women may be more likely to champion interethnic political movements while men often promote an ethnicity based on martial masculinity. Bringing together anthropologists, historians, linguists, and political scientists, "Gendering Ethnicity in African Women's Lives" offers a diverse and timely look at a neglected but important topic.

Contributor Bio:  Shetler, Jan Bender Jan Bender Shetler is an associate professor of African and world history at Goshen College in Goshen, Indiana. She is the author of Telling Our Own Stories: Local Histories from South Mara, Tanzania.

Medios de comunicación Libros     Paperback Book   (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado)
Publicado 30 de mayo de 2015
ISBN13 9780299303945
Editores University of Wisconsin Press
Género Cultural Region > African Studies
Páginas 352
Dimensiones 152 × 228 × 19 mm   ·   482 g
Lengua Inglés  
Editor Shetler, Jan Bender

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