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Janice Boddy

    L'histoire de cet auteur a été initialement compilée par une anthropologue. Après sa mort, le manuscrit a été achevé et complété par une introduction replaçant l'histoire dans son contexte historique et social approprié.

    Aman
    Civilizing Women
    Wombs and Alien Spirits
    • Wombs and Alien Spirits

      • 399pages
      • 14 heures de lecture
      4,1(78)Évaluer

      Adherents to the zar cult in northern Sudan encounter spirits that are parallels of historically relevant figures in the known human world. Based on nearly two years of ethnographic fieldwork in a Muslim village this study offers a multidimensional interpretation of the zar.

      Wombs and Alien Spirits
    • Civilizing Women

      British Crusades in Colonial Sudan

      • 434pages
      • 16 heures de lecture
      3,4(11)Évaluer

      Focusing on the period between 1920 and 1946, the book delves into the clash of cultures between British colonial officers and Sudanese Muslims, particularly regarding the contentious issue of female circumcision. Janice Boddy utilizes colonial documents and popular culture to provide ethnographic insights, while also highlighting women's roles in zâr spirit possession rituals as a form of resistance and cultural expression. This exploration reveals the complexities of colonialism and the nuanced experiences of women in Sudan.

      Civilizing Women
    • Aman

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,8(626)Évaluer

      This is the extraordinary first-person account of a young woman's coming of age in Somalia and her struggles against the obligations and strictures of family and society. By the time she is nine, Aman has undergone a ritual circumcision ceremony; at eleven, her innocent romance with a white boy leads to a murder; at thirteen she is given away in an arranged marriage to a stranger. Aman eventually runs away to Mogadishu, where her beauty and rebellious spirit leads her to the decadent demimonde of white colonialists. Hers is a world in which women are both chattel and freewheeling entrepreneurs, subject to the caprices of male relatives, yet keenly aware of the loopholes that lead to freedom. Aman is an astonishing history, opening a window onto traditional Somali life and the universal quest for female self-awareness.

      Aman