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Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa Dorothy L Hodgson

Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa By Dorothy L Hodgson

Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa by Dorothy L Hodgson


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Summary

The trend in pastoralist studies assumes that pastoralism and pastoral gender relations are inherently patriarchal. The contributors to this collection demonstrate that pastoralist gender relations are dynamic, relational, historical and produced through complex local-translocal interactions.

Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa Summary

Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa: Gender, Culture and the Myth of the Patriarchal Pastoralist by Dorothy L Hodgson

The trend in pastoralist studies assumes that pastoralism and pastoral gender relations are inherently patriarchal. The contributors to this collection demonstrate that pastoralist gender relations are dynamic, relational, historical and produced through complex local-translocal interactions. The dominant trend in pastoralist studies has long assumed that pastoralism and pastoral gender relations are inherently patriarchal. The contributors to this collection, in contrast, use diverse analytic approaches to demonstratethat pastoralist genderrelations are dynamic, relational, historical and produced through complex local-translocal interactions. Combining theoretically sophisticated analysis with detailed case studies, this collection should appeal to those doing research and teaching in African studies, gender studies, anthropology and history. North America: Ohio U Press; Kenya: EAEP

Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa Reviews

... opens new comparative perspectives and compels us to think again about familiar assumptions and to make unfamiliar connections between elements that have hitherto remained discrete. Otherwise, we too will end up, like colonial administrators, as the last pastoral patriarchs, long since left behind by our putative subjects.' - Richard Waller in IJAHS 'Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa is an important contribution to the scholarly literature on gender relations in cattle-keeping communities. This volume, in fact, is the first book-length work on the subject...The eleven chapters...all contribute to the book's central thesis that scholars who rely on, and often valorize, men as both informants and true pastoralists, have consistently overlooked women's roles in pastoralist society. For this point alone, Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa is welcome, as it will surely provoke fruitful debate and further enquiry...provides a wealth of rich case studies, advancing our appreciation not only for women in pastoralist societies, but for pastoralism in general.' - Christian Jennings in Journal of African History '...reflects the emergence of a generation of scholars who since the early 1980s have challenged the existing literature on pastoral societies for itsfailure to recognise the significance of gender relations in pastoral life; and Hodgsons's introductory chapter provides a critical overview of the anthropological and ethnographic literature from this perspective. ...a significant emphasis on the cultural and social elements of pastoral life as well as material expressions of poverty which brings to life the complex patterns of gender relations including at the household level. ...In challenging conventional understandings of gender relationships withinpastoral societies Hodgson rejects the notion of pastoral culture as determined solely by ecological and economic systems; arguing instead that pastoralist culture and gender relations are complex historical products of the actions and ideas on men and women and reactions to external influences...add important insights into the pastoral condition. -- Cherry Gertzel in ARAS

Table of Contents

Introduction - gender, culture and the myth of the patriarchal pastoralist, Dorothy I. Hodgson. Part 1 Making culture: gender and material culture in West Pokot, Kenya, Barbara Bianco; gender, ethnicity and social aesthetics in Maasai and Okiek beadwork, Corinne Kratz and Donna Pido; women and men of the Khoekhoen of Southern Africa, Andrew B. Smith and Lita Webley. Part 2 Domains of power: pastoralism, patriarchy and history among Maasai in Tanganyika, 1890-1940, Dorothy L. Hodgson; women's roles in peacemaking in Somali society, Asha Hagi Elmi et al; gender, ethnographic myths and community-based conservation in a former Namibian homeland, Sian Sullivan. Part 3 Social relations: the fertility of houses and herds - producing kinship and gender among Turkana pastoralists, Vigdis Brich-Due; exalted mothers - gender aging and postchildbearing experience in a Tuareg community, Susan Rasmussen. Part 4 Negotiating development and modernity: milk selling among Fulani women in northern Burkina Faso, Solveig Buhl and Katherine Homewood; development ideologies and local knowledge among Samburu women in northern Kenya, Bilinda Straight; pastoral disruption and cultural continuity in a pastoral town, M.I. Aguilar.

Additional information

GOR013972916
9780852559116
0852559119
Rethinking Pastoralism in Africa: Gender, Culture and the Myth of the Patriarchal Pastoralist by Dorothy L Hodgson
Used - Very Good
Paperback
James Currey
2001-01-01
392
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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