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States of Marriage - Gender, Justice, and Rights in Colonial Mali (Paperback)
Loot Price: R746
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States of Marriage - Gender, Justice, and Rights in Colonial Mali (Paperback)
Series: New African Histories
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"A theoretically sound, gender-specific legal history through the
reading of civil and criminal court records on marriage disputes in
Sikasso, Mali...The book echoes the original contribution of Nkiru
Nzegwu (in Family Matters, 2006) that the oppression and
exploitation of women were at the center of colonial policy.
Burrill analyzes this history of legalized oppression at the local,
national, and transnational levels...Summing up: Recommended."
-CHOICEStates of Marriage shows how throughout the colonial period
in French Sudan (present-day Mali) the institution of marriage
played a central role in how the empire defined its colonial
subjects as gendered persons with certain attendant rights and
privileges. The book is a modern history of the ideological debates
surrounding the meaning of marriage, as well as the associated
legal and sociopolitical practices in colonial and postcolonial
Mali. It is also the first to use declassified court records
regarding colonialist attempts to classify and categorize
traditional marriage conventions in the southern region of the
country. In French Sudan, as elsewhere in colonial Africa, the
first stage of marriage reform consisted of efforts to codify
African marriages, bridewealth transfers, and divorce proceedings
in public records, rendering these social arrangements "legible" to
the colonial administration. Once this essential legibility was
achieved, other, more forceful interventions to control and reframe
marriage became possible. This second stage of marriage reform can
be traced through transformations in and by the colonial court
system, African engagements with state-making processes, and
formations of "gender justice." The latter refers to gender-based
notions of justice and legal rights, typically as defined by
governing and administrative bodies as well as by sociopolitical
communities. Gender justice went through a period of favoring the
rights of women, to a period of favoring patriarchs, to a period of
emphasizing the power of the individual - but all within the
context of a paternalistic and restrictive colonial state.
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