Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Patriarchal Myth: Deconstruction and Reconstruction
- 2 Correlating Linguistics and Archaeology in East-Central African History
- 3 The Early Social History of East-Central Africa
- 4 Women's Authority: Female Coalitions, Politics, and Religion
- 5 Women's Authority and Female Initiation in East-Central African History
- 6 Pots, Hoes, and Food: Women in Technology and Production
- 7 Sacred, but Never Profane: Sex and Sexuality in East-Central African History
- 8 Kucilinga na Lesa Kupanshanya Mayo
- Bibliography
- Index
- Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 The Patriarchal Myth: Deconstruction and Reconstruction
- 2 Correlating Linguistics and Archaeology in East-Central African History
- 3 The Early Social History of East-Central Africa
- 4 Women's Authority: Female Coalitions, Politics, and Religion
- 5 Women's Authority and Female Initiation in East-Central African History
- 6 Pots, Hoes, and Food: Women in Technology and Production
- 7 Sacred, but Never Profane: Sex and Sexuality in East-Central African History
- 8 Kucilinga na Lesa Kupanshanya Mayo
- Bibliography
- Index
- Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora
Summary
Women's Authority and Society in Early East-Central Africa is a long-term social history of a major African region. Its geographical scope is the wide expanse of savannahs extending across Zambia and into Malawi, the southeastern parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the far southwestern edge of Tanzania. Its time frame is the span of eras from the first arrival of farming peoples in the late first millennium BCE up to the nineteenth century CE. As social history, it contributes to an important new field in the study of early African history, exemplified in such recent works as Kairn Klieman's The Pygmies Were Our Compass for the western equatorial rainforest region, David Schoenbrun's A Green Place, A Good Place for the African Great Lakes region, and Rhonda Gonzales' Society, Religion, and History for eastern and east-central Tanzania.
Women's Authority differs from the other early social histories in that it is the first exploration into understanding women's power and gender dynamics in the longue durée of early African history. This study views gender relations as a crucial and integral factor in shaping the specific ways in which people have carried out work, social relations, and spiritual beliefs in past eras in East-Central Africa, and how they have distributed authority and allocated their social, spiritual, and material responses to historical challenges and opportunities. The findings of this book raise a series of issues for historians of Africa and, by implication, for historians of other world areas to consider in the future.
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- Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2010