Call#: Penn Library Web -
Covers Internet and new media technologies in Africa
Call#: Van Pelt Library HA4675 .M552 2003
Covers Internet and new media technologies in Africa
Searchable fulltext (PDF-format) documents from African research organizations, NGOs, educational institutions, and government agencies. Topics covered include agriculture, AIDS support services, arid lands research, children and family and social services, environmental conservation and forest and water resources, finance and economic development including the informal sector, journalism, human rights and social justice, peace and conflict resolution, politics and elections, population issues and family planning, urban development, and women's issues.
-from Cambridge Journals
Holdings: 1997-
Education for Chemical Engineers vol 2. iss 1. 2007, Pages 56-67
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Pfaff, Francoise. Cinema of Ousmane Sembene, a pioneer of African film. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1984.
In chapter 2 of Cinema of Ousmane Sembène, Pfaff decribes Ousmane Sembène’s exquisite skill as a storyteller, calling him the modern equivalent of the traditional African griot. A griot is an individual that specializes in storytelling, legends and family histories. Sembène certainly fits the bill, but what makes him even more authentic as the first African international herald was the fact that he was self-educated, opinionated and critical of post-colonial rule in Africa. The author elaborates upon the popularity and effectiveness of griot storytelling in African heritage, and how this heritage gave Sembène’s films such a distinct style when compared to Western films. Griot-style stories were often allegorical in nature, and we see the same style in most of Sembène’s films. Pfaff uses Xala, for instance, to show how individual character psychology is not as important as character stereotype – each character representing a distinct worldview.
I think the relation between this chapter and Xala is rather obvious. Sembène uses Xala, to tell the story of post-colonial Africa. The film has elements of allegory, and certainly has a strong political and cultural agenda, as would be expected coming from a griot. The film was recorded in French so that Sembène could tell the story to an international audience, in hopes of spurring outside political pressure and accountability for African governments.
Thomas, Lynn M. Politics of the womb : women, reproduction, and the state in Kenya. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2003.
Chapter three of Lynn Thomas’s book Politics of the womb: women, reproduction, and the state in Kenya talks about the ban on female excision (female genital cutting, a cultural and religious tradition in many African people groups) in Kenya from 1956-1959. The ban resulted in a significant backlash, not from indigenous men in positions of leadership, but rather from young indigenous women. Girls organized excisions on their own, as it was firmly believed that the coming-of-age ritual was necessary to live morally and even birth healthy children. However, the girls didn’t follow all of the rituals, celebrations and formats of the traditional excision ceremony, which resulted in the older generation of women criticizing, and even not recognizing the excisions as legitimate. Interestingly, this marked a significant shift in women’s mentality in Kenya. The new generation of women represented a hybrid between rebellion against authority (both colonial and traditional), and preservation of tradition.
This article relates to the film Xala, and specifically to my thesis, in the way that demonstrates how one people group navigated the friction between traditionalism and modernism. While the girls from this time period rejected the imposition of colonial modernism, they nonetheless diverged from complete traditionalism as well. This generation even stood in rebellion to their maternal elders, who insisted upon the most “traditional” and thorough rituals associated with female excision. The character and actions of Rama in Sembène’s film run parallel to the Kenyan girls’ attitude.
Okom, Mojúbàolú Olúfúnké. “African Women and Power: Reflections on the Perils of Unwarranted Cosmopolitanism.” Jenda: A Journal of Culture and African Women Studies 1:1.
This article explores African women’s positions of power in the pre and post-colonial eras. The author first argues that it is incorrect to describe pre-colonial African women’s roles as “traditional,” as they had been steadily changing for centuries. Not only that, but they varied dramatically from people group to people group. The author focuses on one particular people group, the Yorùbá of Southern Nigeria, to demonstrate the rights and power exercised by women in the capacities of mothers, wives, daughters, sisters, political officials, owners of capital, monarchs, deities and religious leaders. The author shows how women’s anatomical role as child-bearers was a position of honor in pre-colonial Africa. Of particular interest was the rigid power structure within each clan of the Yorùbá people group. Women belonging to the clan actually had authority over men that chose to marry into the clan. Although the clan still operated as a patrimony, being a clan insider trumped sex.
As it relates to Xala, this article gives several real examples of how women in Africa can and do exercise power. In Xala, we saw this in the way El Hadji’s first wife explicitly pointed out her superiority to the second and third wives both to her husband and to the other wives. She could essentially hold her husband’s treatment of the second and third wives in check, and demand respect and submission from the other wives. The author would also argue that many cultural “traditions” claimed by the males in the film were actually much less traditional than they claimed when one examines Africa’s history, which is very interesting.
Boris, Eileen. “Gender After Africa!” Africa After Gender. Ed. Catherine M. Cole, Takyiwaa Manuh, and Stephan F. Miescher. Bloomington, IN : Indiana University Press, 2007. 191-204.
Eileen Boris opens her essay by turning a common question asked by Western gender academics on its head. Instead of asking “What impact has gender as a category of analysis had on the study of Africa,” which in itself assumes Western thinkers have already arrived at a correct framework for studying gender, the author argues that a much more appropriate question is “What can Africa do for gender?” She explains how Western gender theorists have, until recently, incorrectly proposed their own historical gender tradition to be universal. Instead, historical African social and gender structures need to be used to enlarge the framework for academic gender theory. Additionally, she explores the similarities and differences between gender and other social attributes such as age, lineage, kinship and wealth for determining social status. Finally, she shows how African gender is a source of power in post-colonial political struggles.
In many ways, this article reveals the Western bias in my original thesis for this research project (I actually still retained the same thesis, as it is a case in point for Eileen Boris’s and many other African gender scholars). My thesis assumes that gender and feminism thought in Africa need a Western savior-that African women have to find a balance between their “primitive” gender tradition and the “correct” or “modern” Western ideas of gender and liberation. It also makes me wonder what opinions about gender roles director Ousmane Sembène might have had in mind when he released Xala. Most of the Western analysis of the film describe women in the film as “masculine,” and the men as “feminine,” but Boris’s article suggests such reviews assume Western gender stereotypes are universal. Did Sembène have this in mind as well?
Chant, Sylvia. Gender, Generation and Poverty: Exploring the ‘Feminisization of Poverty’ in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2007.
Chapter 2 of Chant’s book gives an overview of the recent push to expand the definition and measurement of poverty at the global level. While traditional measurements fixated on household income, the author shows how this overlooks social dimensions such as self-esteem, respect, education and power. The author goes on to show that disaggregation of poverty measures into male and female components is essential to accurately measure poverty. Such disaggregation shows an alarming trend, a phenomena described as the “Feminisation of Poverty,” and has led to a whole new field of research. Also, it has brought issues of female ‘empowerment’, described as resources (preconditions), agency (process) and achievements (outcome), more to the forefront, leading to the popularization of microfinance, self-help groups, community development initiatives targeted at women. The author summarizes the modern definition of poverty as something that is a “Multidimensional and Dynamic Entity.”
This section of Gender, Generation and Poverty related closely to El Hadji’s wives’ financial predicament, particularly his first wife Adja’s dependence upon El Hadji. When questioned by her daughter Rama as to why she wouldn’t divorce her husband, we learn that at least part of her reluctance has to do with her financial dependency. The vast majority of the female characters in the film fit into the Western gender role of the financially dependant stay-at-home wife. As defined by Sylvia Chant (and her contemporaries), these women live in partial poverty as they lack the agency and achievement enjoyed by African males. Although El Hadji’s wives seem to have the resources (house, some personal property), their seems to be little place for them outside the home.
Call#: University Museum Library MUSEUM 496.27 L646G
Call#: Van Pelt Library PL8143 .S7
Call#: Van Pelt Library PL8375.1 .T83 1994
Call#: Van Pelt Library PL8232 .S613 1982
Call#: Van Pelt Library PL8232 .S613 1982
Call#: Van Pelt Library PL8631.1 .H88 1981
| Suggests the outlines of a theory of how sociocultural and grammatical knowledge are integrated in the construction of personal names and how such knowledge can be retrieved from surface linguistic forms. Draws on anthropological and linguistic procedures to analyse the Yoruba personal naming system and the sociolinguistic principles that underly it. |
Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0001-9720%282000%2970%3A1%3C79%3ABPNFBT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T
DOWNLOADED
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Abstract: The circumstances of a child's birth define his or her starting point in life, and they will be inscribed in the child's file, so to speak, by means of a set of rule-governed birth names. These 'child names' are perfectly suitable for this initial stage of life, but all BaatOmbu aspire one day to replace this original set of 'orthodox' names by another orthodox name, an inherited title name, corresponding to an achieved social and spiritual status. Commoners and nobles have separate institutions of "g[unknown][unknown]biru", 'inherited title names', but in both cases the successive bearers of a "g[unknown][unknown]biru" share an exemplary essence that each must honour and perpetuate with his life. Baat[unknown]nu nobles bestow baptism names on children around the age of seven, allowing these young candidates for the various "g[unknown][unknown]biru" to be matched, according to their potential, with a name whose influence will guide them into adulthood. Joking names and teknonyms can be classified as non-orthodox or informal names and seem to fill a gap left by the orthodox names, allowing personal and family relations to be expressed and negotiated. These names carry no prestige, but their use affords pride and pleasure and, unlike orthodox names, they can be used without infringing 'shame'-based taboos./
Call Number: P1 .A6
Status: Available, check location
Library Has: v.1 (1959)-
Notes: Currently received. Unbound issues in Current Periodicals.
Journal of African Cultural Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1. (Jun., 1998), pp. 73-83.
Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=1369-6815%28199806%2911%3A1%3C73%3AAASOIM%3E2.0.CO%3B2-A
Abstract: Personal names (anthroponyms) are human resources for identifying and categorizing individuals. They constitute one of the universal parts of language which have drawn the attention of anthropologists and linguists alike. Our contribution to studies on Igbo personal names here is from a linguistic/anthropological perspective. This paper undertakes in-depth linguistic and anthropological studies of Igbo market-day names.
African Studies Review, Vol. 47, No. 3. (Dec., 2004), pp. 143-163.
Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0002-0206%28200412%2947%3A3%3C143%3ALNAWTC%3E2.0.CO%3B2-S
Abstract: This article shows the links between naming practices and war. The focus is on MPLA war names used during the Angolan struggle for independence. These names are framed in the wider context of the relations between language and war. In many African contexts, names are not singular and fixed, but may change with every personal transformation. Entering the life of a soldier constitutes just such a drastic change. The article shows that through war names, a kaleidoscope of issues may be addressed, including the relations between language, rank, and power, personal history and popular culture, spirit possession and resurrection, self-description and labeling, writing and legitimacy, and secrecy and identity.///Cet article met en evidence le lien entre les pratiques nominatives liees et la guerre. Il se concentre sur les noms de guerre employes par le MPLA (Partido do Poder em Angola) pendant le conflit angolais pour l'independance. Ces noms sont envisages dans le contexte plus vaste des relations entre la langue et la guerre. Dans de nombreux contextes africains, les noms ne sont pas signuliers ou definitifs, mais ils evoluent souvent avec chaque transformation personnelle. L'entree dans la vie de soldat constitue un exemple radical de ce type de transformation. L'article montre comment, a travers les noms de guerre, un eventail de questions peuvent etre adressees, y compris les relations entre la langue, la hierarchie et le pouvoir, l'histoire individuelle et la culture populaire, les phenomenes de possession et de resurrection, l'auto description et le choix du nom, l'ecriture et la legitimite et enfin, le secret et l'identite.
Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0001-9720%282000%2970%3A1%3C107%3ATCCIIG%3E2.0.CO%3B2-G
Call#: Van Pelt Library PL8005 .M87 2000
Call#: Van Pelt Library PL8005 .A24 2000


