Fragmenting Contexts and Contextualizing Fragments
2003, Journal of Natal and Zulu History
https://doi.org/10.1080/02590123.2003.11964123…
15 pages
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Abstract
Most of the contributions to this edited volume were first presented at the conference "Contexts of Gender in Africa" organized by the Nordic Africa Institute's Sexuality, Gender and Society in Africa research programme in February 2002. In themselves, many of the studies are interesting and well-written, and in some instances offer new lines of inquiry into ethnographic studies. Nonetheless. problems inevitably arise when these disparate works are grouped into such a broad volume. Signe Amfred makes it abundantly clear in her introduction that postmodem writing on sexuality in Africa involves a transformation not merely of cognitive boundaries, but also of the ways in which these boundaries are constituted in the first place. Lest one accuse this particular postmodem cnt1que of representation of indicating the end of meaning. Amfred assures us that the point of this volume, separated into. three parts, is to raise the possibility of different modalities of meaning, or...
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2. This commissioned study was carried out under the auspices of a collection of local and international research and development Non-Governmental Organisations (cf. NDT & CASS 1994; Becker and Hinz 1995). 1. I refer to the area as Owambo unless specified contexts require the colonial designation, Ovamboland.
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Among the aspects that make complex the understanding of sexualities in Africa is that of linguistic and interpretation. As a power, language has through descriptions and naming, been used to mediate, disorder, and reorder sexualities in African societies. This process is often gendered and can be recognised through words, phrases and expressions that communicate certain dynamics of power. As a tool of power language has been utilized by colonialism, Christian missions, cultural traditionalists, popular culture protagonists, and international bodies to lodge colonialists' linguistics while dislodging many African traditional languages and practices. Practices such as Female genital circumcision (FGC) have persisted partly due to linguistic limitations.Whether FGC is understood as a 'mutilation' or 'other', nevertheless language plays a central role in obscuring efforts to address health complications associated with the practice. The paper uses an African feminist approach. First, it argues that linguistic aspects that embed the contemporary understanding of African sexualities have colonialist and Christian missions' roots, and that the dislodging of local languages has facilitated continued violence against women. Second, by taking the case of female genital circumcision as still practiced by some communities among the Sabiny people of Uganda the paper argues that the internationally recognised term of 'mutilation' may not necessarily be 'communicating' to the practicing communities, instead may be interpreted and resisted as imperialistic.
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2010
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