Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-xm8r8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-28T04:05:23.213Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Twentieth-Century Transformations in Notions of Gender, Parenthood, and Marriage in Southern Ghana: A Critique of the Hypothesis of “Retrograde Steps” for Akan Women

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 October 2013

Stefano Boni*
Affiliation:
boni/boni@unisi.it

Extract

In the course of the 1970s, one of the principal focuses of the emerging feminist anthropology was the reassessment of issues of gender inequality. Drawing their inspiration from Marxist theory going back to Engels, some works historicized female oppression and analyzed its political and economic determinants. To demonstrate that gender inequality was the product of specific historical formations, the observable gender relations were, at times, opposed to a prior egalitarian social order in which value differentiation was not attached to the gendered labor division (e.g., Leacock 1981). The approach was criticized by those who believed that female subordination characterized present and past societies on which solid documentary evidence was available (e.g., Rosaldo 1974). The idea that gender realtions in some non-western societies were marked by parity prior to the degradation produced by colonization was not abandoned, however, and influenced neighboring disciplines.

Recent studies concerned with the transformations of gender relations in sub-Saharan Africa over the twentieth century tend to stress the decline in social and economic position of women. Ethnographic, economic, and historical studies state that the traditional value attached to being female is threatened by the economic and political developments of the last century. Women are said increasingly to lose their previous independence, to have to cater for children and elderly by themselves, and to lose ground in productive activities (Robertson and Berger 1986; Mikell 1997a; Baerends 1998).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2001

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abu, K. 1983. “The Separateness of Spouses: Conjugal Resources in an Ashanti Town,” in Oppong, C. ed. Female and Male in West Africa. London, 156–68.Google Scholar
Akyeampong, E. 1996. Drink, Power and Cultural Change: A Social History of Alcohol in Ghana, c. 1800 to Recent Times. Oxford.Google Scholar
Akyeampong, E. and Obeng, P. 1995. “Spirituality, Gender, and Power in Asante History.” International Journal of African Historical Studies 28:481508.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allman, J. 1991. “Of ‘Spinsters’, ‘Concubines’ and ‘Wicked Women:’ Reflections on Gender and Social Change in Colonial Asante.” Gender and History 3:176–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allman, J. 1994. “Making Mothers: Missionaries, Medical Officers and Women's Work in Colonial Asante, 1924-1945.” History Workshop 38:2347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allman, J. 1996. “Rounding up Spinsters: Gender Chaos and Unmarried Women in Colonial Asante.” Journal of African History 37:195214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allman, J. 1997. “Fathering, Mothering and Making Sense of Ntamoba: Reflections on the Economy of Child-Rearing in Colonial Asante.” Africa 67:296321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allman, J. 2000. “Be(com)ing Asante, Be(com)ing Akan: Thoughts on Gender, Identity, and the Colonial Encounter” in Lentz, C. and Nugent, P., eds. Ethnicity in Ghana: The Limits of Invention. London, 97118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allman, J. and Tashjian, V. 2000. “I Will Not Eat Stone:” A Woman's History of Colonial Asante. Oxford.Google Scholar
Amoo, J.W. 1946. “The Effects of Western Influence on Akan Marriage.” Africa 16:228–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arhin, K. 1978. “Gold-Mining and Trading Among the Ashanti of Ghana.” Journal des Africanistes 48:89100CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arhin, K. 1980. “The Economic and Social Significance of Rubber Production and Exchange on the Gold and Ivory Coasts, 1880-1900.” Cahiers d'Études Africaines 77–78:4962.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arhin, K. 1983. “Peasants in Nineteenth Century Asante,” Current Anthropology 24:471–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Austin, G. 1994. “Human Pawning in Asante, 1800-1950: Markets and Coercion, Gender and Cocoa” in Falola, T. and Lovejoy, P., eds., Pawnship in Africa. Boulder, 119–59.Google Scholar
Baerends, E.A. 1998. “Changing Kinship, Family and Gender Relations in Sub-Saharan Africa” in Risseeuw, C. and Ganesh, K. eds., Negotiation and Social Space: A Gendered Analysis of Changing Kin Networks in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. London, 4786.Google Scholar
Bleek, W. 1972. “Geographic Mobility and Conjugal Residence in a Kwahu lineage.” Research Review (Institute of African Studies, Legon) 8:4755.Google Scholar
Bleek, W. 1975. “Parents and Children in a Kwahu lineage.” Legon Family Research Paper 4:3038.Google Scholar
Boni, S. 1998. “History and Social Structure: A Study of the Sefwi Residential System (Ghana).” Ethnology 37:239–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boni, S. 1999. “Hierarchy in Twentieth-Century Sefwi (Ghana).” D.Phil., Oxford University.Google Scholar
Clark, G. 1994. Onions are my Husband: Survival and Accumulation by West African Market Women. Chicago.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, G. 1999. “Negotiating Asante Family Survival in Kumasi, Ghana.” Africa 69:6686.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Danquah, J.B. 1928. Akan Laws and Customs. London.Google Scholar
Delafosse, M. 1930. Enquête coloniale dans l'Afrique Française occidentale et équatoriale. Paris.Google Scholar
Dumett, R.E. 1979Precolonial Gold Mining and the State in the Akan Region, with a Critique of the Terray Hypothesis” in Dalton, G. ed. Research in Economic Anthropology. 2 vols.: Greenwich, 1:3768.Google Scholar
Dumett, R.E. 1987. “Precolonial Gold Mining in Wassa: Innovation, Specialization, Linkages to the Economy and to the State” in Schildkrout, E. ed. The Golden Stool: Studies in the Asante Center and Periphery. New York, 209–24.Google Scholar
Dumett, R.E. 1998. El Dorado in West Africa: The Gold-Mining Frontier, African Labor, and Colonial Capitalism in the Gold Coast, 1875-1900. Athens, OH.Google Scholar
Etienne, M. 1977. “Women and Men, Cloth and Colonization: The Transformation of Production-Distribution Relations Among the Baule (Ivory Coast).” Cahiers d'Etudes Africaines 18:4164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Etienne, M. 1983. “Gender Relations and Conjugality Among the Baule” in Oppong, C., ed. Female and Male in West Africa. London, 303–19.Google Scholar
Fortes, M. 1949[1970]. “Time and Social Structure: An Ashanti Case Study” reprinted in Fortes Time and Social Structure and Other Essays. New York, 132.Google Scholar
Fortes, M. 1950. “Kinship and Marriage among the Ashanti” in Radcliffe-Brown, A.R. and Forde, D., eds. African Systems of Kinship and Marriage. London, 252–84.Google Scholar
Fortes, M. 1963. “The ‘Submerged Descent Line’ in Ashanti” in Schapera, I., ed. Studies in Kinship and Marriage. London, 5867.Google Scholar
Fortes, M. 1970. Kinship and the Social Order: The Legacy of Lewis Henry Morgan. London.Google Scholar
Greenstreet, M. 1972. “Social Change and Ghanaian Women.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 6:351–55.Google Scholar
Grier, B. 1992. “Pawns, Porters, and Petty Traders: Women in the Transition to Cash Crop Agriculture in Colonial Ghana.” Signs 17:304–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, P. 1975. “The West African Farming Household” in Goody, J., ed. Changing Social Structure in Ghana. London, 119–36.Google Scholar
James, W. 1978. “Matrifocus on African Women” in Ardener, S., ed. Defining Females. The Nature of Women in Society. London, 140–62.Google Scholar
Jones-Quartey, P.W. 1974. “The Effect of the Maintenance of Children Act on Akan and Ewe Notions of Paternal Responsibility.” Legon Family Research Papers 1:292304.Google Scholar
Kyei, T.E. 1992. Marriage and Divorce Among the Asante: A Study Undertaken in the Course of the Ashanti Social Survey (1945). Cambridge.Google Scholar
Leacock, E. 1981. Myths of Male Dominance. New York.Google Scholar
Lystad, R.A. 1959. “Marriage and Kinship Among the Ashanti and the Agni: A Study of Differential Acculturation” in Bascom, W.R. and Herskovits, M.J., eds. Continuity and Change in African Cultures. Chicago, 187204.Google Scholar
Manuh, T. 1995. “Changes in Marriages and Funeral Exchanges Among the Asante: A Case Study from Kona, Afigya-Kwabre” in Guyer, J.I., ed. Money Matters. London, 188201.Google Scholar
McCaskie, T.C. 1983. “R.S. Rattray and the Construction of Asante History: An Appraisal.” History in Africa 10:187206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mensah-Brown, A.K. 1968. “Marriage in Sefwi-Akan Customary Law: A Comparative Study in Ethno-Jurisprudence.” Présence Africaine 68:6186.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikell, G. 1984. “Filiation, Economic Crisis, and the Status of Women in Rural Ghana.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 18:195219.Google Scholar
Mikell, G. 1986. “Ghanaian Females, Rural Economy, and National Stability.” African Studies Review 29/3:6788.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikell, G. 1988. “Sexual Complementarity in Traditional Ghanaian Society.” Canadian journal of African Studies, 22:656–61.Google Scholar
Mikell, G. 1995. “The State, the Courts, and ‘Value’: Caught Between Matrilineages in Ghana” in Guyer, J.I., ed. Money Matters. London, 225–44.Google Scholar
Mikell, G. 1997a. “Introduction” in Mikell, G., ed. African Feminism: The Politics of Survival in Sub-Saharan Africa. Philadelphia, 150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mikell, G. 1997b. “Pleas for Domestic Relief: Akan Women and Family Courts” in Mikell, G., ed. African Feminism: The Politics of Survival in Sub-Saharan Africa. Philadelphia, 96123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oppong, C. and Abu, K. 1987. Seven Roles of Women: Impact of Education, Migration and Employment on Ghanaian Mothers. Geneva.Google Scholar
Oppong, C., Okali, C., Houghton, B. 1975. “Women Power: Retrograde steps in Ghana.” African Studies Review 18/3, 7184.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rattray, R.S. 1923 [1969]. Ashanti. New York.Google Scholar
Rattray, R.S. 1927. Religion and Art in Ashanti. Oxford.Google Scholar
Rattray, R.S. 1929. Ashanti Law and Constitution. Oxford.Google Scholar
Roberts, P.A. 1987. “The State and the Regulation of Marriage: Sefwi Wiawso (Ghana), 1900-1940” in Afshar, H., ed. Women, State and Ideology. London, 4869.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robertson, C. and Berger, I. 1986. “Introduction: Analyzing Class and Gender—African Perspectives” in Robertson, C. and Berger, I., eds. Women and Class in Africa. New York, 324.Google Scholar
Rosaldo, M. 1974. “Woman, Culture, and Society: A Theoretical Overview” in Rosaldo, M. and Lamphere, L., eds. Woman, Culture and Society. Stanford, 1742.Google Scholar
Tashjian, V.B. 1995. “It's Mine and It's Ours Are Not the Same Thing: A History of Marriage in Rural Asante, 1900-1957.” PhD, Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Tashjian, V.B. 1996. “‘It's Mine’ and ‘It's Ours’ Are Not the Same Thing: Changing Economic Relations between Spouses in Asante” in Hunwick, J. and Lawler, N., eds. The Cloth of Many Colored Silks. Evanston, 205–22.Google Scholar
Tellier, M. 1902. “Coutumes des Agni de l'Indénié” in Clozel, F.J. and Villamur, R., eds. Les coutumes indigènes de la Côte d'Ivoire. Paris, 147–70.Google Scholar
Tetteh, P.A. 1967. “Marriage, Family, and Household” in Birmingham, W., Neustadt, I., and Omaboe, E.N., eds. A Study of Contemporary Ghana. 2 vols.: London, 2:201–16.Google Scholar
Tsikata, D. 1996. “Gender, Kinship, and the Control of Resources in Colonial Southern Ghana” in Palriwale, R. and Risseeuw, C., eds. Contextualising Gender and Kinship in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. London, 110–32.Google Scholar
Vellenga, D.D. 1974. “Arenas of Judgement: An Analysis of Matrimonial Cases Brought Before Different Types of Courts in the Eastern Region of Ghana in the Nineteen-Thirties and Nineteen-Sixties” in Oppong, C., ed. Domestic Rights and Duties in Southern Ghana. Legon, 77101.Google Scholar
Vellenga, D.D. 1983. “Who is a Wife? Legal Expressions of Heterosexual Conflicts in Ghana” in Oppong, C., ed. Female and Male in West Africa. London, 144–55.Google Scholar
Vellenga, D.D. 1986. “Matriliny, Patriliny, and Class Formation among Women Cocoa Farmers in Two Rural Areas of Ghana” in Robertson, C. and Berger, I., eds. Women and Class in Africa. New York, 6277.Google Scholar