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What Gender Is Motherhood?
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What Gender Is Motherhood?

Changing Yorùbá Ideals of Power, Procreation, and Identity in the Age of Modernity

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Produktdetails

Verlag
SPRINGER NATURE
Palgrave Macmillan US
Erschienen
2015
Sprache
English
Seiten
262
Infos
262 Seiten
216 mm x 140 mm
ISBN
978-1-137-53877-2

Hauptbeschreibung


In this book, Oyěwùmí extends her path-breaking thesis that in Yorùbá society, construction of gender is a colonial development since the culture exhibited no gender divisions in its original form. Taking seriously indigenous modes and categories of knowledge, she applies her finding of a non-gendered ontology to the social institutions of Ifá, motherhood, marriage, family and naming practices. Oyěwùmí insists that contemporary assertions of male dominance must be understood, in part, as the work of local intellectuals who took marching orders from Euro/American mentors and colleagues. In exposing the depth of the coloniality of power, Oyěwùmí challenges us to look at the worlds we inhabit, anew.


Inhaltsverzeichnis



Introduction: Exhuming Subjugated Knowledge and Liberating Marginalized Epistemes


1. Divining knowledge: The Man Question in Ifá


2. (Re)Casting the Yorùbá World: Ifá, Ìyá and the Signification of Difference


3. Matripotency: Ìyá in Philosophical Concempts and Socio-Policial Institutions


4. Writing and Gendering the Past: Akwé and the Endogenous Production of History


5. The Gender Dictaters: Making Gender Attributions in Religion and Culture


6. Towards a Genealogy of Gender, Gendered Names, and Naming Practices


7. The Poetry of Weeping Brides: The Role and Impact of Marriage Residence in the Making of Praise Names


8. Changing Names: The Roles of Christianity and Islam in Making Yorùbá Names Kosher for the Modern World


Conclusion: Motherhood in the Quest for Social Transformation


Glossary


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Über den AutorIn

Oyèrónkẹ́ Oyěwùmí is Associate Professor of Sociology at SUNY Stony Brook, USA. She was born in Nigeria and educated at the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, and the University of California at Berkeley, USA. Her monograph,  The Invention of Women: Making an African Sense of Western Gender Discourses  won the 1998 Distinguished Book Award of the Sex and Gender Section of the American Sociological Association, and was a finalist for the Herskovitts Prize of the African Studies Association in the same year.