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  1. Aunty with a Key: Aunties’ power, status and authority in African traditional ceremonies.Phemelo C. Hellemann & Thoko Sipungu - 2024 - Inkanyiso 16 (1):1-10.
    This article offers personal reflections and scholarly observations that identify the significance of maternal and paternal aunties in bogadi and ulwaluko traditional ceremonies. Bogadi is a Tswana marital and thanksgiving ceremony between two families. It is a rite of passage for the newlyweds as they are inducted into marriage. Ulwaluko is an initiation of Xhosa boys into manhood. Through an African Feminist lens and an analytic autoethnographic methodology, the authors narrate personal experiences of their aunties roles in closed ceremonial interactions (...)
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  2. Gender, African philosophies, and concepts.Dube Shomanah & W. Musa (eds.) - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This volume sets out to explore, propose, and generate feminist theories based on African indigenous philosophies and concepts. It investigates specific philosophical and ethical concepts that emerge from African Indigenous Religions and considers their potential for providing feminist imagination for social-justice oriented Earth Communities. The contributions examine African indigenous concepts such as Ubuntu, ancestorhood, trickster discourse, storytelling, and ngozi. They look to deconstruct oppressive social categories of gender, class, ethnicity, race, colonialism, heteronormativity, and anthropocentricism. The book will be of interest (...)
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  3. African women legends and the spirituality of resistance.Dube Shomanah, W. Musa, Telesia K. Musili & Sylvia Owusu-Ansah (eds.) - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This volume focuses on African indigenous women legends and their potential to serve as midwives for gender empowerment and for contributing towards African feminist theories. It considers the intersection of gender and spirituality in subverting patriarchy, colonialism, anthropocentricism, capitalism as well elevating African women to the social space of speaking as empowered subjects with public influence. The chapters examine historical, cultural, and religious African women legends who became champions of liberation and their approach to social justice. The authors suggest that (...)
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  4. Transcultural Identity of Twerking: A Cultural Evolution Study of Women’s Bodily Practices of the Slavic and East African Communities.Aleksandra Łukaszewicz, Priscilla Gitonga & Kiryl Shylinhouski - 2024 - Social Epistemology 38 (2):208-221.
    Human culture is built upon nature to help humans adapt to their environment – first natural, but later natural-cultural. Cultural practices are aimed at aiding survival in changing environments, and in different settings they meet different environmental pressures, causing later changes in trajectories. According to cultural evolutionism, behaviours, ideas and artefacts are subject to inheritance, competition, accumulation of modifications, adaptation, geographical distribution, convergence and changes of function – these are mechanisms present also in biological evolution. In the following paper, we (...)
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  5. African Conceptions of Human Dignity and Violence Against Women in South Africa.Louise du Toit - 2023 - In Motsamai Molefe & Christopher Allsobrook (eds.), Human Dignity in an African Context. Springer Verlag. pp. 155-185.
    This contribution reads the current debate on African personhood and human dignity against the backdrop of South African women’s struggle for dignity in the face of persistent and pervasive interpersonal violence perpetrated against them by South African men. The point of departure is Menkiti’s classic description of normative personhood in African “traditional thought”, as translated into “the idiom of modern philosophy”. This starting point exposes two fault lines that run through all African philosophical endeavours: the first is the tension between (...)
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  6. The cultural distortion of the African world view and the subordination of women in ‘postcolonial’ African societies.Ebbah Dube - 2023 - South African Journal of Philosophy 42 (3):192-201.
    The purpose of this article is to bring to light a critical question which borders around the decolonial feminism discourse, and in so doing I unveil some salient insights which add valuable contributions to the discourse about the place of feminism in the African context. The motivating problem is the question of subordination of women in Africa. There are many reasons and questions, each deserving thorough examination that have been brought forward for the causes and possible explanations of the phenomenon. (...)
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  7. Feminism and women in African philosophy.Edwin Etieyibo & Pedro Tabensky - 2023 - South African Journal of Philosophy 42 (3):161-164.
    In this preamble, we highlight some of the more recent work on gender and sexuality in African philosophy. We do this as a way of introducing the special issue on “African Philosophy, Women, and Feminism”. In particular, we outline and highlight the trajectory and intellectual landscape of several discussions on women and feminism in African philosophy in the issue, and in this way, build on some previous work on gender, women, sexuality and African philosophy.
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  8. Non-binary gender in African personhood?Julia Huysamer & Louise du Toit - 2023 - South African Journal of Philosophy 42 (3):246-260.
    A case has been made by various authors that the normative and processual notion of personhood found in African philosophy is discriminatory: it has been labelled as sexist, ableist and anti-queer. Within the anti-queer critique, one area that has not been specifically addressed in the literature is whether this notion of personhood is biased against people who identify as non-binary with respect to gender. This includes people who are gender fluid and gender neutral, among others. In this article, we argue (...)
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  9. An African Feminist Interrogation of Existential Epistemology: Women as the “Other of the Other” in (Post)Colonial Africa.Abosede Priscilla Ipadeola - 2023 - In Björn Freter, Elvis Imafidon & Mpho Tshivhase (eds.), Handbook of African Philosophy. Dordrecht, New York: Springer Verlag. pp. 413-427.
    The African peoples’ colonial experience raises some fundamental existential questions that should not be ignored. There is no doubt that the process of decolonizing contemporary Africa is going to be difficult, if not outright impossible, without addressing those existential questions. It is worth noting that in addition to altering, distorting, and destroying part or all of the political, economic, relational, moral, and social structures that existed before colonialism, colonizers also imposed some existential ideals upon Africans, which have continued to affect (...)
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  10. Drawing African Diasporic women anthropologists in dialogue: Decolonizing the canon.Amanda Walker Johnson - 2023 - Anthropology of Consciousness 34 (2):389-404.
    Inspired by the use of naming and portraiture together in the Black artivism–such as that protesting the murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor–this paper reflects on the use of portrait drawing as a practice of genealogy. While working on a project to raise the visibility of scholars and their works in the African Diaspora, specifically Francophone women anthropologists, I felt compelled to draw their portraits. Drawing African Diasporic women into dialogue from the archive attends to temporality, vision, and listening, (...)
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  11. Understanding gender identities in an African communitarian world view.Vitumbiko Nyirenda & Simphiwe Sesanti - 2023 - South African Journal of Philosophy 42 (3):176-191.
    In African philosophical literature, and especially in Afro-communitarianism, there are discussions about the value of the relationship an individual has with her respective community. By community, reference is made to the metaphysical holistic view of community which includes all beings in nature. But since the article deals with gender, which is a social construction, most of the arguments appeal to a narrower version of community, that of human beings. Therefore, discussions about “value” refer to the value that is given to (...)
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  12. Complementary Personhood and Gender: An Interrogation Within African Philosophy.Diana Ekor Ofana - 2023 - Arụmarụka 3 (1):109-129.
    In this paper, I argue for an Afro-communitarian account of personhood that considers the value of complementarity as a necessary part of human existence. The reason for conceptualizing personhood as a complementary enterprise is to dispel the understanding of gender that sustains gender inequality. I aim to explore the logic that characterizes complementary personhood as a specific kind of Afro-communitarian personhood that can account for gender complementarity. I argue that the universalized idea of patriarchy and gender, as construed within Western (...)
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  13. African Epistemology and Epistemic Injustice Against Women: Complementary Epistemology to the Rescue.Evaristus Eyo & Precious Obioha - 2022 - Sapientia Journal of Philosophy 16:144-154.
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  14. Discrimination and Violence against Women with Disabilities in Africa: Introducing Innocent Asouzu’s Complementarity.Joyline Gwara, Diana Ekor & Aribiah David Attoe - 2022 - Philosophia Africana 21 (2):63-77.
    To the authors’ knowledge, not much has been said or done in African philosophical circles with regard to providing a theoretical framework from which the discrimination against African women with disabilities can be addressed. In this article, the authors show how such a framework can be grounded in Innocent Asouzu’s complementarism. Their contention, one grounded in this framework, is that this discrimination has its roots in an isolationist, elitist, and exclusivist mindset/metaphysics. The authors further argue that one way to overcome (...)
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  15. Colonialism and the Repression of Nairobi African Women Street Traders in the 1940s.Pamela Olivia Ngesa, Felix Kiruthu & Mildred J. Ndeda - 2022 - Thought and Practice: A Journal of the Philosophical Association of Kenya 8 (1):95-123.
    By the 1940s, the Municipal Council of Nairobi had enacted a host of By-Laws to control the presence of Africans, especially women, and had set up several agencies to implement them. Consequently, women street vendors were not only denied access to legal trade, but remained unwanted in the town except under very special circumstances. Nonetheless, pushed by their adversity, a number of them resorted to illegal hawking and demonstrated their resilience against the odds. However, as the hawkers’ earnings subsidised the (...)
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  16. Feminist Epistemology and Human Values in African Culture.B. A. Lanre-Abass - 2007 - Philosophy, Culture, and Traditions 4:57-71.
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  17. La donna nel pensiero africano.Aweto Pauline Ogho - 2001 - In Lidia Procesi Xella & Martin Nkafu Nkemnkia (eds.), Prospettive di filosofia africana. Roma: Edizioni associate.
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