Women and Class in AfricaClaire C. Robertson, Iris Berger De artikelen in deze reader zijn onderverdeeld in drie secties : 1. Access to critical resources, 2. Dependence versus autonomy, 3. Female solidarity or class action. Met uitgebreide bibliografie, p. 274-296 |
Contents
Analyzing Class and GenderAfrican | 3 |
Access to Critical Resources | 10 |
Toward | 27 |
Copyright | |
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Abeokuta activities African women agricultural areas boys bridewealth Bujra capital capitalist cash Chapter class formation class position cocoa coffee estates colonial period compounds consciousness Copperbelt countries crops differentiation domestic dominated East African economic European exploitation factory farmers female solidarity gender stratification Ghana girls groups Harry Thuku household husbands ideology Ile-Ife important income increased independence industry interview issues Kenya Kiambu Kiambu District Kikuyu Kinshasa Kisangani labor power Lagos land lineage livestock Maasai male market women marriage married matrilineal mode of production Mukasa Nairobi Nigeria organization participation peasant percent petty commodity production polygyny precolonial primary relations of production relationship reproduction role rural sex-gender system sexual social societies South Africa status Staudt strike structure struggle subsistence textile tion trade traditional Uganda union urban wage labor wives woman women workers women's labor Yoruba Zaire Zambia