- Publisher:
- Boydell & Brewer
- Online publication date:
- September 2012
- Print publication year:
- 2010
- Online ISBN:
- 9781580467575
- Subjects:
- Area Studies, African Studies, History, African History
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This study of more than two thousand years of African social history weaves together evidence from historical linguistics, archaeology, comparative ethnography, oral tradition, and art history to challenge the assumptions that all African societies were patriarchal and that the status of women in precolonial Africa is beyond the scope of historical research. In East-Central Africa, women played key roles in technological and economic developments during the long precolonial period. Female political leaders were as common as male rulers, and women, especially mothers, were central to religious ceremonies and beliefs. These conclusions contribute a new and critical element to our understanding of Africa's precolonial history. Christine Saidi is assistant professor of history at Kutztown University.
Saidi's careful, pathbreaking study of the central African ssavannah from Kasai-Katanga to Malawi reminds readers that the relevance of powerful women to African history extends deeply into the rich past of that region, certainly to the 16th and 17th centuries. Recommended.'
Source: Choice
Saidi's book is innovative, presenting a new synthesis of deep-time history for East-Central Africa and recasting issues of gender and women's authority in the precolonial past. Her multidisciplinary approach-combining linguistics, archaeology, and ethnography-provides a powerful model for recovering gender histories not only for early Africa but for all human societies.'
Kairn A. Klieman Source: University of Houston
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