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Full Description
Raising feminist concerns about the struggles of African women amid debates surrounding the socio-cultural, economic and political future of Africa remains an immense challenge. Fatou Sow, the renowned Senegalese feminist activist and academic, illustrates here her own journey through a continuously developing global discourse. Her fundamental aim is to demonstrate the emergence and development of women's and feminist studies in Africa, highlighting its achievements, failures and, most importantly, its complexity.
She argues that it is crucial to examine the influence of the patriarchy in light of Africa's historical matriarchal systems, which form the basis of the continent's social structures. Feminist research must also evaluate how gender intersects with age, class, ethnicity, caste, race and religious disparities, among other inequalities prevalent on the continent. As an African feminist, rooted in her African context and cultures, Sow is compelled to analyze conflicting realities, transformations and contradictions, as well as the complex contributions that are specific to different times and places. African cultures are not just relics of struggles against a colonial West, a West defined by domination. These cultures are primarily memories and living spaces that are deconstructed and reinvented daily, at every moment, with each generation, marked by triumphs and defeats.
Contents
Foreword - Mame-Fatou Niang
Introduction
FIRST PART
AFRICAN FEMINISMS: CHARTING FEMINIST MOVEMENTS, DOING FEMINIST RESEARCH
I. Political Mobilisation of Women in West Africa
II. The Appropriation of Gender Studies in Sub-Saharan Africa
III. Feminist Movements in Africa
SECOND PART
AFRICAN WOMEN'S HUMAN RIGHTS: FACING RELIGIOUS AND POLITICAL FUNDAMENTALISM
IV. Female Genital Mutilation and Human Rights in Africa
V. Who Owns Women's Bodies?
VI. Religion and Politics in Sub-Saharan African Secular States
CONCLUSION
AFRICAN FEMINISM NOW
VII. The Representation of Women and Claims to Citizens' Rights in Africa: Beyond a Political Debate
VIII. What Secularism Means for African Women's Rights and Citizenship
Bibliographical References
Notes



