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Women Must not Become Lions – Gendered Norms in Kankan, Guinea
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 3827175
Author(s) Ammann, Carole
Author(s) at UniBasel Ammann, Carole
Year 2016
Title Women Must not Become Lions – Gendered Norms in Kankan, Guinea
Journal JENdA: A Journal of Culture and African Women Studies
Number 28
Pages / Article-Number 68-81
Keywords Gender, Islam, Guinea, Norms
Abstract NGOs, but also journalists and scholars often generalize about gender relations in (African) Muslim societies, and their conclusions tend to be normative: either that women there will always be oppressed or they overemphasize changes over the last decades, for example, the emerging (Muslim) women’s movements . Both conclusions are simplistic. Muslim women’s social, political, religious, and economic roles differ, amongst others, according to their age, their educational, ethnic, and family background, not to mention their personal character. Thus, their situation differs significantly from place to place and varies across time. To emphasize the active engagement of Muslim women with others in the Guinean city of Kankan this article draws on Emirbayer and Mische’s (1998) definition of human agency as the outcome of an interplay between habit, imagination, and judgment. This analytical lens serves to shed light on particular gender relations and the shifts therein in a given context.
Publisher Africa Resource Center
ISSN/ISBN 1530-5686
URL http://www.africaknowledgeproject.org/index.php/jenda/article/view/3025/2968
edoc-URL http://edoc.unibas.ch/55081/
Full Text on edoc No
 
   

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