In Sierra Leone, the dominant epistemological framework of the
political and social history of the country and the post-colonial
understanding of the place of men and women are based on the
inter-subjective discourses of power, place, identity and
belongingness. Through a complex web of culturally regulated,
politically motivated and patriarchally conditioned belief systems on
sexualities, a transition is imagined that goes beyond symbolism and
familial attributes. Its aesthetics, as this book demonstrates, are
deployed as a domain in which the political and cultural understanding
of statehood, gender relations, politics, governance, armed conflict,
human rights, women’s empowerment and sexual identity are made and
remade. In the main, the rudimentary discourses on the everyday
individual/collective survival strategies of women have exposed, in
expressive forms, the gendered uncertainties in people’s lives.
However, in practical terms, as described in this book, these
uncertainties are a demonstration of the tensions between culturalism
(and its post-colonial discontents) and the gender-ideological
narrative concerning the question of gender equality and women’s
place in politics, culture and society across time and space in Sierra
Leone.
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Culture, Politics and Society in Sierra Leone
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781787070233
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Peter Lang
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter