Gender and class in Victorian society Victorian society was organized hierarchically. While race, religion, region, and occupation were all meaningful aspects of identity and status, the main organizing principles of Victorian society weregenderandclass. As is suggested by the sexual double standard, ...
I conclude that both texts present clear evidence of pre-colonial gender constructs. The dissertation, less referenced by scholars, is however more persistent in discussing inequalities. I discuss the portrayal of gender, offer reasons for differences between the two texts and highlight areas of ...
Family Concerns: Gender and Ethnicity in Pre-Colonial West AfricaFor at least the past twenty years, historians of pre-colonial Africa have studied gender and ethnic relations, but have focused on either gender or ethnicity without making reference to the other. This essay redresses this neglect ...
Importantly, however: "these gender roles or norms were not necessarily organized around a hierarchical principle of female oppression and subordination; rather, prescriptive norms for men and women have varied widely across practising cultures, with power or status hierarchies often operating over age,...
TAPU AND NOA AS NEGOTIATORS OF MAORI GENDER ROLES IN PRECOLONIAL AOTEAROA AND TODAY doi:10.20507/MAIJournal.2021.10.2.2MAI Journal (2230-6862)Mitchell, KellyOlsen-Reeder, Vini
Queen Njinga, 1582-1663 : ritual, power and gender in the life of a precolonial African ruler / 来自 ResearchGate 喜欢 0 阅读量: 25 作者: C Skidmore-Hess 摘要: Typescript. Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1995. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 345-352). ...
Uche Uwaezuoke Okonkwo
Gender as Colonial Exploitation in French Indochina: Concubines in Selected Pre-1965 Novels Published in or Translated to English[Note: the illustration is from the dust cover of Harr y Hervey's novel Congai that Cosmopolitan...Jones, Walter...
Public/Private Dichotomy in Pre-Colonial Yoruba Society and Gender Inequality in Sports in Contemporary Africa: Towards a Conscious Gender Neutralisation in Contemporary Sportsdoi:10.5829/idosi.mejsr.2014.22.08.22051Abosede Ipadeola
This article acknowledges an intersectionality of traditional, colonial, and post‐colonial patriarchies and the persistence of coloniality in the present spaces in which AWT operates, as well as discontinuities in the gender perspectives in these different periods....