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Middle Class African Marriage - A Family Study of Ghanaian Senior Civil Servants (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,025
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Middle Class African Marriage - A Family Study of Ghanaian Senior Civil Servants (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Library Editions: Marriage
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In the 1970s among peoples of the third world migration, paid
employment, and urban living had caused changes in domestic
economies, in decision making in households, and in the sexual
division of labour and power. This was particularly so in areas
formerly subjected to colonial domination and therefore the
influence of European mores and institutions. This book, previously
published in 1974 as Marriage Among a Matrilineal Elite, this
edition in 1981, provides one of the few detailed accounts of such
changes, by a writer who has lived the kind of life she describes,
that of the urban educated Akan of Southern Ghana - people who have
migrated from farming and fishing villages to Accra the capital to
find employment in government institutions after protracted higher
education, often overseas. The study is particularly interesting
because it focuses upon people from an ethnic area practicing
matrilineal descent and inheritance, in which women and men have
traditionally both worked in agriculture: in which husbands and
wives have customarily resided in separate houses, affording both
sexes considerable autonomy as spouses and in which women have held
important political offices, as well as sharing responsibilities
for maintenance of dependent children. Akan women provide an
important model of responsible energetic females, who have in the
past and to some extent in the present, avoided the domestic trap
of wifely dependence. But, as we read, the trap is open to those
who forsake traditional patterns of economic endeavour or whose
resources vis a vis their men folk are reduced. The book was also a
significant contribution to the comparative sociology of the family
at the time, providing an exercise in methodology in which the aim
has been to evolve ways of documenting and comparing two major
aspects of change in conjugal family relationships. On one hand,
the division of labour, resources and power between spouses - the
'jointness or segregation' of the conjugal role relationship - and
on the other, the extent to which the conjugal family is a
functionally discrete unit in a number of domestic activity areas:
in popular and ambiguous terms whether the family is 'extended' or
'nuclear'. The use of sociological concepts developed in other
areas of the world gives this book a significant position in the
development of a cross culturally valid sociology of the family.
The subject matter and conceptual frameworks used here will thus be
of interest to sociologists, economists and anthropologists in
general and to specialists in African and Black studies, Women's
Studies and Sex Roles in particular, as well as to the male and
female feminists around the world.
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