Gender and Sexuality in Kenyan Societies

Gender and Sexuality in Kenyan Societies
Title Gender and Sexuality in Kenyan Societies PDF eBook
Author Besi Brillian Muhonja
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 257
Release 2022-07-07
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1666917486

Download Gender and Sexuality in Kenyan Societies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In Gender and Sexuality in Kenyan Societies: Centering the Human and the Humane in Critical Studies, edited by Besi Brillian Muhonja and Babacar M’Baye, contributors explore the application of ubuntu/utu responsive perspectives and methods to critical studies. Through the lens of ubuntu/utu, the contributors to this Kenya-focused volume draw from the diverse fields of postcolonial studies, literary studies, history, anthropology, sociology, political science, environmental studies, media studies, and development studies, among others, to demonstrate the urgency and necessity of humane scholarship/research in gender and queer studies. By centering decolonial approaches and the human and humane, concentrating on subjects and identities that have been largely neglected in national and scholarly debates, the chapters are subversive, complex, and inclusive. They advance within Kenyan studies themes and elements of alternative, non-binary, variant, and non-heteronormative gender identities, sexualities, and voices, as well as approaches to doing knowledge. Underscoring the timeliness of such a text is evidence rendered in sections of the collection highlighting the significance of ubuntu/utu-centric scholarship. Challenging the erasure of the human in academic works, the chapters in this volume look inward and locate the voices and experiences of Kenyan peoples as the pivotal locus of analysis and epistemological derivation.

Gender, Youth Sexuality, and HIV/AIDS

Gender, Youth Sexuality, and HIV/AIDS
Title Gender, Youth Sexuality, and HIV/AIDS PDF eBook
Author Eunice Kamaara
Publisher
Pages 148
Release 2005
Genre Medical
ISBN

Download Gender, Youth Sexuality, and HIV/AIDS Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Gender, Ethnicity, and Violence in Kenya’s Transitions to Democracy

Gender, Ethnicity, and Violence in Kenya’s Transitions to Democracy
Title Gender, Ethnicity, and Violence in Kenya’s Transitions to Democracy PDF eBook
Author Lyn Ossome
Publisher Lexington Books
Pages 237
Release 2018-04-02
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1498558313

Download Gender, Ethnicity, and Violence in Kenya’s Transitions to Democracy Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Critiquing the valorization of democracy as a means of containing violence and stabilizing political contestation, this book draws links between the democratization process and sexual/gendered violence observed against women during electioneering periods in Kenya. The book shows the contradictory relationship between democracy and gendered violence as being largely influenced in the first instance by the capitalist interests vested in the colonial state and its imperative to exploit laboring women; secondly, in the nature of the postcolonial state and politics largely captured by ethnic, bourgeois class interests; and third, influenced by neoliberal political ideology that has remained largely disarticulated from women's structural positions in Kenyan society. It argues that colonial capitalist interests established certain patterns of gender exploitation that extended into the postcolonial period such that the indigenous bourgeoisie took the form of an ethnicized elite. Ethnicity shaped politics and neoliberal political ideology further blocked women’s integration into politics in substantive ways. It concludes that it is not so much the norms and values of liberal democracy that assist in understanding women’s exclusion, but rather the structural dynamics that have shaped women’s experiences of democratic politics. In this way, gender violence in the context of democratization and electoral violence with its gendered manifestation can be fully understood as deeply embedded in the history of the structural dynamics of colonialism, capitalism, and patriarchalism in Kenya.

Womanhood and Girlhood in Twenty-First Century Middle Class Kenya

Womanhood and Girlhood in Twenty-First Century Middle Class Kenya
Title Womanhood and Girlhood in Twenty-First Century Middle Class Kenya PDF eBook
Author Besi Brillian Muhonja
Publisher Lexington Books
Pages 131
Release 2017-12-29
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1498534341

Download Womanhood and Girlhood in Twenty-First Century Middle Class Kenya Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This study of twenty first century girlhoods and womanhoods charts a new area of scholarship on Kenya. The chapters investigate questions related to how new rituals of girlhood and womanhood that materialize when religious, indigenous, and foreign worlds encounter each other are re-structuring family and society, recasting roles, and informing fresh conceptualizations of African girlhood and womanhood. The author’s interdisciplinary analysis and writing journeys through the different stages of girlhood and womanhood as ritualized by Kenya’s 21st century middle class, and teases out the implications of these peculiarities to identity (re)creation and the restructuring of societies’ organs, and traditionally gendered institutions. Applying a critical African studies lens, the arguments in this book center women as originators of action and thought without inquiring into a male other. Essentially, this work disrupts patri-centered constructions and examinations of female bodies and identities. The resulting deductions inform on the substratum of Kenyan girls and women’s self-definitions as manifest through their experiences and ritualized practices, and articulate the impact of the performances of these bodies and identities on Kenyan and global societies.

Women, Sexuality and the Changing Social Order

Women, Sexuality and the Changing Social Order
Title Women, Sexuality and the Changing Social Order PDF eBook
Author Beth Maina Ahlberg
Publisher Routledge
Pages 208
Release 2022-05-14
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1000593576

Download Women, Sexuality and the Changing Social Order Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book, first published in 1991, examines the effect of government policies and social restrictions on the reproductive behaviour and family life of the women of Kenya, especially the Kikuyu people. Importation of techniques for social and behavioural regulation from the developed nations, the social restructuring that followed the colonial intervention, the Mau Mau uprisings and current widespread concern with AIDS have disrupted traditional influences on Kenyan reproductive behaviour and family life. In response to these changes, women mobilised into a movement comprised of small local women’s groups scattered throughout Kenya that attempt to educate and influence both its members and government policy. The successes and failures of this movement offer important lessons for the rest of Africa and the developing world.

Gender and Development

Gender and Development
Title Gender and Development PDF eBook
Author Emily Awino Onyango
Publisher Langham Publishing
Pages 341
Release 2018-10-31
Genre Religion
ISBN 1783684909

Download Gender and Development Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

For a long time African history has been dominated by western perspectives through predominantly male accounts of colonial governments and missionaries. In contrast, Dr Emily Onyango provides an African history of mission, education development and women’s roles in Kenya. Based on archival research and interviews of primary sources this book explores the relationship of these areas of history with each other, focusing on the Luo culture and the period of 1895 to 2000. With the pre-colonial African context as the foundation for understanding and writing history, Dr Onyango uses gender to analyze the role of Christian missionaries in the development of women’s education and their position in Kenyan society. The result of this well-researched study is not only a challenge to the traditional understanding of history, but also a counternarrative to the common view that to be liberated African women must disregard Christianity. Rather she looks at the importance Christianity plays in helping women establish themselves economically, politically and socially, in Kenyan society. This research is a vital contribution to women’s history and the history of Christianity in Africa.

Gender and Sexuality in Ghanaian Societies

Gender and Sexuality in Ghanaian Societies
Title Gender and Sexuality in Ghanaian Societies PDF eBook
Author Martha Donkor
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 181
Release 2022-09-01
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1793628459

Download Gender and Sexuality in Ghanaian Societies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Gender and Sexuality in Ghanaian Societies explores cultural dynamics embedded in the interstices of agency, vulnerability, and power within patriarchal structures that seek to regulate the sexual lives of women in Ghana. Emphasizing the centrality of gender as a motive force for sexual expression, the book stresses that contemporary Ghanaian women's sexual expressions are caught at the intersection of traditional gender expectations of heteronormativity and women’s perceptions of how heteronormativity should operate in their lives. The book's emphasis on women's agency is significant because it highlights a flaw in earlier, Western accounts of African women's lives under Africa's special brand of patriarchy that held women in total subjection to men. Gender and Sexuality debunks that trope and presents Ghanaian women's dynamism, resilience, and vulnerabilities embedded in the diverse cultures in which they live.