1st Edition

Gender, Agency and Change Anthropological Perspectives

By Victoria Goddard Copyright 2000
    292 Pages
    by Routledge

    292 Pages
    by Routledge

    In response to global change, people create new opportunities and conditions, and in their responses they are influenced by both gender and age. In Gender, Agency and Change the contributors illustrate the complexities involved in the constitution and performance of agency. Such agency may be reflected in strategies of accommodation and adaption that can nevertheless produce new institutional arrangements. Alternatively, they may be directed towards the outright rejection of these processes. The cases examined in this volume explore the ways in which different subjects engage in the reformulation of spaces, roles and identities, redefining the boundaries between, and the content of, the 'public' and the 'private'. The examples also provide an account of how gendered discourses are deployed to convey new meanings, a new sense of place and time, confirming or challenging ideas of 'tradition' and 'modernity'. This collection will be of particular interest to students of anthropology and gender studies.

    1: Introduction; 2: Gender and Difference; 3: Women Are Women or How to Please Your Husband; 4: Kinship, Gender and Work in Socialist and Post-Socialist Rural Poland; 5: Properties of Identity; 5: Gendered Houses; 7: Gender and Politics Through Language Practices Among Urban Cape Verde Men; 8: Out of the House - To Do What?; 9: The 'old Red Woman' against the 'young Blue Hooligan'; 10: 'The Virgin and the State'; 11: Writing the Usual Love Story

    Biography

    Victorial Ana Goddard was born in Argentina and trained as an anthropologist at University College, London. She is currently a lecturer in Anthropology at Goldsmiths College, London.