Twenty-Five Years of African Women Writing African Women's and Gendered Worlds
Twenty-Five Years of African Women Writing African Women's and Gendered Worlds
Twenty-Five Years of African Women Writing African Women's and Gendered Worlds
Nwando Achebe
Journal of Women's History, Volume 25, Number 4, Winter 2013, pp. 275-287
(Article)
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2013
Twenty-Five Years of African
Women Writing African
Women’s and Gendered Worlds
Nwando Achebe
speech, good health facilities, and an overall higher standard of living that
the host nations offer. What is Africa’s brain drain becomes the United States’
and Europe’s brain gain. The country has produced well-placed scholars
like Bolanle Awe, the aforementioned Ifi Amadiume, Obioma Nnaemeka,
Amina Mama, Oyeronke Oyewumi, and myself (all of whom, except Bolanle
Awe and me, write outside the field of history) who have dedicated their
writings to exploring women’s issues, the nature or non-existence of gender
(see discussion of Oyewumi text below), sex, and sexuality in particular
African contexts. They have all, in one way or another, challenged flawed
Western derived theoretical impositions upon distinctly African societies.
In Male Daughters, Female Husbands, Amadiume argues that sex and
gender did not coincide in the eastern Nigerian town of Nnobi. She instead
suggests that gender was flexible and fluid, encouraging the formation of
uniquely Igbo categories of female husbands and male daughters.8 Ama-
diume also issues a challenge to Western feminists’ misinterpretations of
ethnographic evidence to assume a universal subordination of women; the
presence of a non-existent public-private dichotomy in African societies to
explain female subordination; and a mistaken assignment of a homoerotic
lens in the viewing of woman-to-woman marriage. Of the latter, Amadiume,
in fact, insists that the Nnobi women on whom her study is based would
find such an ascription insulting. Amadiume’s articulation of this belief has
led to some real friction between the author and some new wave Africanist,
mostly Western, scholars of sexuality.9
In Reinventing Africa: Matriarchy, Religion, and Culture, Amadiume offers
another scathing critique of the Eurocentric and patriarchal biases inherent
in the discipline of anthropology. She instead argues for the centering of the
ideology of a motherhood paradigm—as expressed in the African family,
goddess based religions, and a moral principle rooted in love—as the ba-
sis, not only for a subversion of such jaundiced claims, but, upholding the
principal of matriarchy in Africa.10 While her essentialist assumptions about
Africa can be empirically and historically challenged, Reinventing Africa
offers strategies for a reimagining or reinventing of the existing literature
on gender in Africa through an African-centric lens.
The directness of Amadiume’s challenge about the inappropriateness
of fixating a Western gaze upon African realities has in some ways relieved
other African born scholars from the responsibility of having to talk back
to this Western interpretive canon on African women. In Nigerian Women in
Historical Perspective, for instance, the historian Bolanle Awe is not interested
in talking back to Western writers, or offering a corrective. She leads instead
a cadre of eleven authors in presenting a sweeping range of biographies of
women leaders in Nigeria starting with the fifteenth-century rule of Queen
Amina of Zaria, and ending with biographies of women during the colo-
278 Journal of Women’s History Winter
As articulated above, the writing coming out of South Africa has, for
the most part, concerned itself with theorizing the worlds of the haves and
have-nots. The aforementioned Shula Marks, Jacklyn Cock, and Belinda
Bozzoli represent a distinguished cohort of South African women writers
of European descent who have documented the life histories of both white
and black South African women. In Not Either an Experimental Doll, a title
taken from one of the letters written by a fifteen-year-old Transkeian girl, Lily
Moya (pseudonym), to an elderly white Durban educator, Mable Palmer,
Marks explores the separate and different worlds of these women, whose
lives intersect between the years 1949 and 1951. A third woman, Sibusisiwe
Makhanya, a second generation Christian deeply involved in community
work in the rural areas south of Durban, serves as a bridge between the two.
The letters, while highlighting the separateness of these women’s lives, also
reveal that which binds them—discontent in their private lives (Palmer’s
failed marriage, Makhanya choosing not to marry, and Lily resisting an
arranged marriage); an attainment of prominence as public figures, not as
wives of prominent men, but in their own right (Palmer and Makhanya);
and a desire by Moya to lift herself out of unhappy circumstances. All three
women are perceived in one way or another as “difficult” by society at
large, a theme that emerges time and time again in African women’s histo-
riography—confirming that even the most progressive of African societies
wrestle with contradictory expectations about “proper” female behavior
and the rightful place of women in society.21
In Maids and Madams, Jackyn Cock presents a challenge to the use and
oversimplification of the Western feminist notion of sisterhood as an analyti-
cal construct in describing the lived experience of black and white women
in the Eastern Cape of apartheid South Africa. Far from being sisters, Cock
maintains that black domestic workers described themselves as slaves who
were forced to neglect their own families in order to migrate to, and work
in, white-only areas. They would become “mothers” to white children, who
in their adult years could be expected to suffer amnesia—forgetting the
nurture of their black maids—that would allow them to succumb to and
uphold the racist ideologies of the apartheid South African state.22
Belinda Bozzoli’s challenge in Women of Phokeng is different. She tells
the life stories of a single cohort of Tswana Christian peasant women and
seamlessly choreographs their narratives to convey the women’s lived
experience of childhood, work, marriage, family life, and change in South
Africa’s political economy. We do not hear the voices of white South Africa
here. Bozzoli’s focus is on black Tswana women, and, between 1981 and
1984, she collected a series of oral interviews of them, from which she quotes
liberally in chapters that follow in chronological order, the important epochs
in these women’s lives. From birth to schooling, courtship to marriage, mi-
2013 Nwando Achebe 281
This article has explored the tone and tenure of writings to have come
out of Africa in the last quarter of a century. Focusing exclusively on the Eng-
lish speaking world, and centering on indigenously born African scholars, a
number of themes come to light. First, the vast majority of women writing
African worlds document societies that they are most familiar with, that is to
say that they write from an insider or relative insider perspective. Second, in
this body of writing, we witness a progression from the overwhelming trend
of African scholars writing or talking back to their Western counterparts and
vocally challenging Western constructed and derived perspectives, to increas-
ingly moving away from this and, instead, evolving, adopting, and adapt-
ing uniquely African-centered ways of seeing, interpreting, and presenting
African women and gendered worlds. Third, we also witness—in contrast
to Western women writing African worlds—an overwhelmingly positive
tenor in the writings of these African women arising from being positioned
or located on the inside. Finally, it is clear that reproducing an African his-
tory of events in the traditional sense cannot be the goal of African women’s
and gender history. This remains true even if women’s roles in society are
interjected into the narrative. Instead, a new pedagogy that considers African
history as a gendered and gendering process that maps out the actions and
reactions of men and women, while also considering the interactions between
them, must be adapted in place of the standard narrative.
Notes
1
In this short article, I focus my attention primarily on African born scholars
of the English speaking world. I do this for ease of discussion and not in any way
to suggest that African born scholars of the non-English speaking world are not
making substantial contributions to the historiography of women and gender in
Africa. The reverse is actually the case, with women scholars and writers from the
northern part of Africa like Nawal El Saadawi, Leila Ahmed, and Fatima Mernissi
whose Arabic writing is consumed with interrogating issues of gender, religious,
and nationalist struggles publishing northern African women’s worlds. Women from
French and Portuguese Africa have also made significant inroads, and the region
has produced important and well-respected female scholars such as the Senegalese
historian, activist, and politician Penda Mbow, who has published widely on the
interplay between women, human rights, law, and religion in Islamic Senegal. See
especially her edited book, Hommes et Femmes Entre Spheres Publique et Privee (Senegal:
CODESRIA, 2005). Lusophone Africa has produced important female scholars such
as Mozambican Berta Henriques Bras and Ana Mafalda Leite.
2
Ifi Amadiume was certainly not the first African woman scholar to write
about African women’s worlds. In Nigeria, Bolanle Awe was one of the first Nigerian
women to receive a Ph.D. in 1964 and became a professor in 1978. She began her
academic career as a social historian of the Yoruba. An avid oral historian, Bolanle
Awe was at the forefront of legitimizing Nigerian oral historiography. By the early
1970s, her attention had turned to documenting the lives of Nigerian women. She
2013 Nwando Achebe 285
published, in 1977, a seminal piece entitled, “The Iyalode and the Traditional Yoruba
Political System,” in Sexual Stratification: A Cross-Cultural View, ed. Alice Schlegel
(New York: Columbia University Press, 1977),144–160. Then, in 1992, she edited
the critically acclaimed Nigerian Women in Historical Perspective (Ibadan, Nigeria:
Sankore/Bookcraft, 1992).
3
For more on insider versus relative insiderness, see Nwando Achebe,
“Nwando Achebe—Daughter, Wife, and Guest—A Researcher at the Crossroads”
Journal of Women’s History 14, no. 3 (Autumn 2002): 9–31.
4
Daphne Patai, “U.S. Academics and Third World Women: Is Ethical Research
Possible,” in Women’s Words, Women’s Words: The Feminist Practice of Oral History,
ed. Sherna Berger Gluck and Daphne Patai (New York: Routledge, 1991), 137-153.
5
In some instances, African women have actually documented their own
life stories. The explosion of African women scripting their autobiographies bears
witness to this trend. See for instance, Wambui Otieno, Mau Mau’s Daughter: A Life
History (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1998); Mamphela Ramphele, Across
Boundaries: The Journey Of A South African Woman Leader (New York: The Feminist
Press of CUNY, 1999); Winnie Mandela, Winnie Mandela: Part of My Soul Went With
Him (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1985); and Wangari Maathi, Unbowed:
A Memoir (New York: Vintage, 2007), to name but a few.
6
Shula Marks, Not Either an Experimental Doll: The Separate Worlds of Three
South African Women (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988); Jacklyn Cock,
Maids and Madams: Domestic Workers Under Apartheid (London: Women’s Press, 1989).
7
See Belinda Bozolli, whose main contribution to writing African women’s
lives, Women of Phokeng: Consciousness, Life Strategy, and Migrancy in South Africa,
1900–1983 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann, 1991), was a collaboration with Mmantho
Nkotsoe and published by Heinemann Social History Series in 1991.
8
Ifi Amadiume, Male Daughters, Female Husbands: Gender and Sex in an African
Society (London: Zed Books 1987). I contend that male daughters should more appro-
priately be called female sons—because female is their gender— it is their biological
sex that is male. See Nwando Achebe, Farmers, Traders, Warriors, and Kings: Female
Power and Authority in Northern Igboland, 1900–1960 (Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann,
2005), 15 and 22
9
See Will Roscoe and Stephen O. Murray, Boy-Wives and Female Husbands:
Studies of African Homosexualities (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2001), for instance.
10
Amadiume, Male Daughters, Female Husbands. Amadiume has also published
Re-Inventing Africa: Matriarchy, Religion and Culture (London: Zed Books, 1998); and
Afrikan Matriarchal Foundations: The Igbo Case (Trenton, NJ: Red Sea Press 2000).
11
Awe, ed., Nigerian Women in Historical Perspective.
12
Achebe, Farmers, Traders, Warriors, and Kings and Achebe, The Female King
of Colonial Nigeria: Ahebi Ugbabe (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2011).
13
See Stephanie Newell’s attack on Nwando Achebe in Stephanie Newell, The
Forger’s Tale: The Search for Odeziaku (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2006), 9–10;
and Achebe’s response to Newell in Achebe, The Female King of Colonial Nigeria, 13–14.
286 Journal of Women’s History Winter
14
Oyeronke Oyewumi, The Invention of Women: Making An African Sense Of
Western Gender Discourses (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997).
15
Amina Mama, Beyond the Masks: Race, Gender, and Subjectivity (London:
Routledge 1995); Mama, Women’s Studies and Studies of Women in Africa During the
1990’s (Senegal: Codesria 2000); Mama, The Hidden Struggle: Statutory and Voluntary
Sector Responses to Violence Against Black Women in the Home (London: Whiting &
Birch Ltd., 1996).
16
Obioma Nnaemeka, The Politics of (M)Othering: Womanhood, Identity and
Resistance in African Literature (London: Routledge 1997); Sisterhood, Feminisms and
Power in Africa: From Africa to the Diaspora (Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 1998).
17
Obioma Nnaemeka and Chima J. Korieh, Shaping Our Struggles: Nigerian
Women in History, Culture and Social Change (Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 2010);
Nnaemeka, ed., Female Circumcision and the Politics of Knowledge: African Women in
Imperialist Discourses (Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger, 2005).
18
Takyiwaa Manuh, “Doing Gender Work in Ghana,” in Africa After Gender?,
ed. Catherine M. Cole, Takyiwaa Manuh, and Stephan F. Miescher (Bloomington:
University of Indiana Press 2007), 125–149
19
Daymond, M. J., Dorothy Driver, and Sheila Meintjes, editors. Women Writing
Africa: The Southern Region, New York: The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2003; Sutherland-
Addy, Esi and Aminata Diaw, editors. Women Writing Africa: West Africa and the
Sahel, New York: The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2005; Lihamba, Amandina, Fulata
L. Moyo, Mugaybuso M. Mulokozi, and Naomi L. Shitemi, editors, Women Writing
Africa: The Eastern Region, The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2007; and Sadiqi, Fatima,
Amira Nowaira, Azza El Kholy, Moha Ennaji, editors. Women Writing Africa: The
Northern Region, New York: The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2009
20
Busia, Abena P.A., and Stanlie M. James, editors, Theorizing Black Feminisms:
The Visionary Pragmatism of Black Women, Routledge, 1993.
21
Marks, Not Either an Experimental Doll. Other difficult women were con-
structed as wicked in pre-colonial and colonial Africa. See Hodgson and Sheryl
McCurdy, “Wicked” Women and the Reconfiguration of Gender in Africa (Portsmouth,
NH: Heinemann, 2001).
22
Cock, Maids and Madams.
23
Bozolli, Women of Phokeng.
24
Nakanyike B. Musisi, “Women, ‘Elite Polygyny,’ and Buganda State Forma-
tion,” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 16 , no. 4 (Summer 1991): 757–786;
Musisi, “Women and State Formation in Buganda,” in Problems in African History:
The Precolonial Centuries, eds. James M. Burns and Erik K. Ching (New York: Marcus
Weiner Publishing, Inc., 1994), 233–243; Musisi, “A Personal Journey Into Custom,
Identity, Power and Politics: Researching and Writing the Life and Times of Buganda’s
Queen Mother Irene Drusilla Namaganda (1896–1957),” History in Africa 23 (1996):
369–385. Musisi also wrote “Taking Spaces/Making Spaces: Gender and the Cultural
Construction of ‘Bad Women’ in the Development of Kampala-Kibuga, 1900–1962,” in
‘Wicked’ Women and the Reconfiguration of Gender in Africa, ed. Dorothy L. Hodgson and
2013 Nwando Achebe 287
27
Ibid., “The Politics of Perception or Perception as Politics?”
28
Sylvia Tamale, “Out of the Closet: Unveiling Sexuality Discourses in
Uganda,” in Africa After Gender?, eds. Catherine M. Cole, Takyiwaa Manuh, and
Stephan F. Miescherpp (Bloomington: University of Indiana Press 2007), 17–29. Also
engaging the topic of African homophobia and transphobia are two collections edited
by Nigerian, Egyptian, and Senegalese scholars/activists and published in April
2013 and September 2013 respectively. See Ekine, Sokari and Hakima Abbas, eds.
Queer African Reader, (Cape Town, South Africa: Pambazuka Press, 2013); and the
African Studies Review, volume 56, number 2, forum on “Homophobic Africa?” guest
edited by Senegalese comparative literature scholar Ayo A. Coly, which includes an
introduction from Coly (21-30); and an article on “The Politics of Nonconforming
Sexualities in Africa,” (31–46), written by Sylvia Tamale.”
29
Ibid., African Sexualities: A Reader (Nairobi, Kenya: Pambazuka Press, 2011).
She has also published, When Hens Begin to Crow: Gender and Parliamentary Politics
in Uganda (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2000).
30
Tabitha Kanogo, Squatters and the Roots of Mau Mau, 1905-1963 (Athens, OH:
Ohio University Press, 1987); and Tabitha Kanogo, Womanhood in Colonial Kenya,
1900–50 (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 2000).
31
Kenda Mutongi, Worries of the Heart: Widows, Family, and Community in Kenya
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007).
32
Micere Githae Mugo, “Muthoni wa Kirima, Mau Mau Field Marshal:
Interrogating Silencing, Erasure and Manipulation of Female Combatants’ Texts
Monograph” (Harare: SAPES Books, 2004).
33
Otieno, Mau Mau’s Daughter. Before Otieno’s autobiography, the land and
freedom army movement (a.k.a. the Mau Mau narrative) was overwhelmingly male-
centered, consisting of writings on, about, and by male soldiers involved in the war.
34
Maathi, Unbowed.
35
Mamphela Ramphele, Across Boundaries: The Journey of a South African Woman
Leader (New York: The Feminist Press of CUNY, 1999). Winnie Mandela has also
penned her autobiography; see Winnie Mandela, Winnie Mandela: Part of My Soul
Went with Him (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1985).