Rachel Spronk has written a well composed, highly interesting
and maybe even path-breaking book... It is innovative in its focus
on sexuality as bodily experience and implications for 'the
gendered sense of self' of these young men and women and] is also
innovative in terms of methodology; first and foremost by its focus
on a group of young professional men and women. . Signe Arnfred,
Roskilde University
Spronk's theoretical take on this theme is seminal and
challenging. She convincingly shows that a constructivist approach
- emphasizing the social and historical construction of people's
practices and views on sex and sexuality - is highly relevant to
understanding how people navigate their lives. But she emphasizes
also its limitations because her informants' insistence that the
natural, bodily power of sexual feelings has to be brought in as
well. . Peter Geschiere, University of Amsterdam
Among both male and female young urban professionals in Nairobi,
sexuality is a key to achieving a 'modern' identity. These young
men and women see themselves as the avant garde of a new Africa,
while they also express the recurring worry of how to combine an
'African' identity with the new lifestyles with which they are
experimenting. By focusing on public debates and their
preoccupations with issues of African heritage, gerontocratic power
relations and conventional morality on the one hand, and personal
sexual relationships, intimacy and self-perceptions on the other,
this study works out the complexities of sexuality and culture in
the context of modernity in an African society. It moves beyond an
investigation of a health or development perspective of sexuality
and instead examines desire, pleasure and eroticism, revealing new
insights into the methodology and theory of the study of sexuality
within the social sciences. Sexuality serves as a prism for
analysing how social developments generate new notions of self in
postcolonial Kenya and is a crucial component towards understanding
the way people recognize and deal with modern changes in their
personal lives.
Rachel Spronk is Assistant Professor at the Sociology and
Anthropology Department at the University of Amsterdam. She has
published on intimacy and middle class formation in Kenya, on
methodological questions of sexuality research and on the bounds of
poststructural approaches to understand how sex(uality) is
experienced.
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