Welcome to Loot.co.za!
Sign in / Register |Wishlists & Gift Vouchers |Help | Advanced search
|
Your cart is empty |
|||
Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
Long before the creation of the Serengeti National Park in
Tanzania, the people of the western Serengeti had established
settlements and interacted with the environment in ways that
created a landscape we now misconstrue as natural. Western
Serengeti peoples imagine the environment not as a pristine
wilderness, but as a differentiated social landscape that embodies
their history and identity. Conservationist literature has ignored
these now-displaced peoples and relegated them to the margins of
modern society. Their oral traditions, however, provide the means
for seeing the landscape from a new perspective.
Among communities in the Mara region of Tanzania, it is considered men's responsibility to maintain "history." But when Jan Bender Shetler's questions turned to specific familial connections within the village, she discovered her male informants had to occasionally leave the room-to ask their wives for clarification. The result is an original and wide-ranging investigation of the gendered nature of historical memory and its influence on the development of the region over the past 150 years. Shetler's exploration of these oral traditions and histories opens exciting new vistas for understanding how women and men in this culture tell their stories and assert their roles as public intellectuals-with important implications for research in African and gender studies, and the history of ethnicity and nationalism.
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.
Long before the creation of the Serengeti National Park in
Tanzania, the people of the western Serengeti had established
settlements and interacted with the environment in ways that
created a landscape we now misconstrue as natural. Western
Serengeti peoples imagine the environment not as a pristine
wilderness, but as a differentiated social landscape that embodies
their history and identity. Conservationist literature has ignored
these now-displaced peoples and relegated them to the margins of
modern society. Their oral traditions, however, provide the means
for seeing the landscape from a new perspective.
|
You may like...
|