Indigenous culture and the decolonisation of feminist thought in Africa

Research Article

Indigenous culture and the decolonisation of feminist thought in Africa

DOI: 10.1080/02580136.2023.2273117
Author(s): Aderonke Ajiboro Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria , Edwin Etieyibo University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

Abstract

The existence of current feminist thought in Africa is tainted by colonialism. Colonial and postcolonial anthropological thought and Eurocentric scholarship have misrepresented Africa as a society where social and gender roles were largely lopsided. Hence, current feminist thought (which are largely Western) on oppression of women, subjugation and suppression were imposed on the historicity of Africans. In this article, we argue that the misrepresentations of feminism of the indigenous societal order in Africa should be ignored. We bring to the fore some ideas that advance the view that precolonial African society was not anchored on biology or ordered by gender, but was organised by age or seniority, and provided both men and women a sense of equality. Furthermore, we contend that embracing indigenous cultural values in the 21st century provides, on the one hand, a valuable tool for solutions to issues that women face currently, and, on the other hand, a viable means of detaching feminism from Eurocentric misrepresentations.

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