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Wives of the Leopard

Wives of the Leopard

von Edna G. Bay

History Anthropology Gender Studies African Studies
ISBN

0813917921

Verlag

N/A

Erschienen

01.01.1970

Dieses Buch ist aktuell ausleihbar.

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Stichwörter

West African history Dahomey pre-colonial Africa women's history gender studies African monarchy power dynamics cultural history Atlantic slave trade European imperialism vodun ethnography social history political analysis African culture French colonialism 19th century African studies women's roles historical anthropology African kingdoms oral history African politics colonial history African societies historical narratives African heritage.

Über dieses Buch

Wives of the Leopard explores power and culture in a pre-colonial West African state whose army of women and practice of human sacrifice earned it notoriety in the racist imagination of late nineteenth-century Europe and America. Tracing two hundred years of the history of Dahomey up to the French colonial conquest in 1894, the book follows change in two central institutions. One was the monarchy, the coalitions of men and women who seized and wielded power in the name of the king. The second was the palace, a household of several thousand wives of the king who supported and managed state functions. Looking at Dahomey against the backdrop of the Atlantic slave trade and the growth of European imperialism, Edan G. Bay reaches for a distinctly Dahomean perspective as she weaves together evidence drawn from travelers' memoirs and local oral accounts, from the religious practices of vodun, and from ethnographic studies of the twentieth century. Wives of the Leopard thoroughly integrates gender into the political analysis of state systems, effectively creating a social history of power. More broadly, it argues that women as a whole and men of the lower classes were gradually squeezed out of access to power as economic resources contracted with the decline of the slave trade in the nineteenth century. In these and other ways, the book provides an accessible portrait of Dahomey's complex and fascinating culture without exoticizing it.

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Exemplar #B1912-C0001 Verfügbar