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  3. Vol. 40 No. 3 (2015): Africa Development: Special Issue on Transforming Global Relations for a Just World
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Vol. 40 No. 3 (2015): Africa Development: Special Issue on Transforming Global Relations for a Just World

Issue Published : September 15, 2015

2 - No African Futures without the Liberation of Women: A Decolonial Feminist Perspective

https://doi.org/10.57054/ad.v40i3.849
Akhona Nkenkana

Corresponding Author(s) : Akhona Nkenkana

anakhona@gmail.com

Africa Development, Vol. 40 No. 3 (2015): Africa Development: Special Issue on Transforming Global Relations for a Just World
Article Published : September 15, 2021

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Abstract

Coloniality of gender speaks to the perennial question of the liberation of women from various forms of oppression. The ‘modern’ world system and its global order have remained fundamentally patriarchal. This implies that any initiative aimed at creating African futures has to address the fundamental question of the liberation of women. Liberation of women does not speak to the incorporation of women within the patriarchal system. The first step, as Thomas Sankara said in his 1987 speech, is to understand how the patriarchal system functions, to grasp its real nature in all its subtlety, in order to work out a line of action that can lead to women’s genuine emancipation. Decolonising gender therefore becomes a necessary task so that answers to what should be done are formulated from the perspective of asking correct questions. Decolonising gender is to enact a critique of racialized, colonial, and capitalist heterosexualist gender oppression as a lived transformation of the social (Lugones 2010). As such, decolonizing gender places the scholar in the midst of people in a historical, peopled, subjective/intersubjective understanding of the oppressing-resisting relation at the intersection of complex systems of oppression. To a significant extent, it has to be in accord with the subjectivities and intersubjectivities that construct and in part are constructed by the situation. This article deploys decolonial feminist ideas of Thomas Sankara, amomg others, to push forward the frontiers of the struggle for the liberation of women as a constitutive part of initiatives of creating African futures. Its central argument is that women’s liberation struggle should not be reduced to efforts of incorporation of women within the patriarchal, colonial and imperial modern system/s women seek to reject. Making use of Maria Lugones’ theoretical framework, we should be able to understand that the instrumentality of the colonial/modern gender system is subjecting both men and women of colour in all domains of existence and therefore allows us to reveal that the gender transformation discourse is not just a women’s emancipation discourse but rather efforts of both men and women to overcome the colonial global structure that is subjectifying in different ways. The change of the system and its structures, which are essentially patriarchal, is the main mechanism that will bring about possible equal futures for women in Africa, as case studies of Rwanda and South Africa show in the article.

Keywords

liberation of women Gender Thomas Sankara South Africa Rwanda

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Nkenkana, A. 2021. 2 - No African Futures without the Liberation of Women: A Decolonial Feminist Perspective. Africa Development. 40, 3 (Sep. 2021). DOI:https://doi.org/10.57054/ad.v40i3.849.
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References
  1. African Union, 2009, ‘African Union Gender Policy’, REV 2/Feb 10, 2009.
  2. African Development Bank Group, 2008, ‘Rwanda Gender Assessment: Progress towards improving Women’s Economic status’, Human Development Department.
  3. Bennett, E., 2014, ‘Rwanda Strides Towards Gender Equality in Government’, August 15, 2014, Kennedy School Review, Harvard Kennedy School’s Public Policy Journal.
  4. Buiten, D., 2009, ‘Gender transformation and media representations: Journalistic discourses in three South African newspapers’, PhD Dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Pretoria.
  5. Falola, T., 2001, Nationalism and African Intellectuals, Rochester: The University of Rochester Press.
  6. Fanon, F., 1968, The Wretched of the Earth, New York: Grove Press.
  7. Freire, P., 1970, Pedagogy of the oppressed, Bloomsbury Publishing USA
  8. Gordon, A. A., 1996, Transforming Capitalism and Patriarchy: Gender and Development in Africa. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.
  9. Grosfoguel, R., 2007, ‘The Epistemic Decolonial Turn: Beyond Political-Economy Paradigms’, in Cultural Studies, 21, (2/3) (March/May): 203-246.
  10. Iman, A, Mama, A, Sow, F., 1997, Engendering African Social Sciences, Dakar: CODESRIA.
  11. Lugones, M., 2010, ‘Towards a Decolonial Feminism’, Hypatia vol. 25, no. 4, pp 742-74.
  12. Lugones, M., 2008, ‘The Coloniality of Gender’, in Worlds & Knowledges Otherwise, Spring, pp. 4-17.
  13. Martin, O., 2013, ‘The African Union’s Mechanisms to Foster Gender Mainstreaming and Ensure Women’s Political Participation and Representation’, International IDEA, Strömsborg, Stockholm, Sweden.
  14. McClintocK, A., 1995, ‘Imperial Leather: Race, Gender and sexuality in the colonial contest’, Gender Epistemologies in Africa.
  15. McFadden, P., 2000, ‘Issues of Gender and Development from an African Feminist Perspective’, Lecture presented in honour of Dame Nita Barrow, at the entre for Gender and Development Studies, University of the West Indies, Bridgetown, Barbados, November, 2000.
  16. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, S., 2013, Coloniality of Power in Postcolonial Africa: Myth of Decolonisation, Dakar: CODESRIA.
  17. Nkenkana, A., 2014, ‘Building Critical Consciousness for Advancing African Renaissance: Case Study from Pan-African and Afrocentric Institutions’, Unpublished text.
  18. Oyewumi, O., 2011, Gender epistemologies in Africa: Gendering Traditions, Spaces, Social Institutions, and Identities, Palgrave: Macmillan.
  19. Oyewumi, O., 1997, The Invention of Women: Making an African sense of Western Gender Discourses, University of Minnesota Press, United States of America.
  20. Parpart, J.L., 1995, ‘Gender, Patriarchy and Development in Africa: The Zimbabwean case’, Working paper #254, Women and International Development, Michigan State University.
  21. Quijano, A., 2000, ‘The Coloniality of Power and Social Classification’, Journal of World-Systems Research, 6 (2), (Summer/Fall 2000a): 342-386.
  22. Sankara, T., 2007, Women’s liberation and the African freedom struggle, New York: Panaf.
  23. Vaughan, R. P., 2012, ‘Gender Equality and Transnational Civil Society: Shifting global power relations and the post-MDG Agenda’, Global Thematic Consultation, Institute of Education, University of London, October.
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References


African Union, 2009, ‘African Union Gender Policy’, REV 2/Feb 10, 2009.

African Development Bank Group, 2008, ‘Rwanda Gender Assessment: Progress towards improving Women’s Economic status’, Human Development Department.

Bennett, E., 2014, ‘Rwanda Strides Towards Gender Equality in Government’, August 15, 2014, Kennedy School Review, Harvard Kennedy School’s Public Policy Journal.

Buiten, D., 2009, ‘Gender transformation and media representations: Journalistic discourses in three South African newspapers’, PhD Dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Pretoria.

Falola, T., 2001, Nationalism and African Intellectuals, Rochester: The University of Rochester Press.

Fanon, F., 1968, The Wretched of the Earth, New York: Grove Press.

Freire, P., 1970, Pedagogy of the oppressed, Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Gordon, A. A., 1996, Transforming Capitalism and Patriarchy: Gender and Development in Africa. Lynne Reinner Publishers, Inc.

Grosfoguel, R., 2007, ‘The Epistemic Decolonial Turn: Beyond Political-Economy Paradigms’, in Cultural Studies, 21, (2/3) (March/May): 203-246.

Iman, A, Mama, A, Sow, F., 1997, Engendering African Social Sciences, Dakar: CODESRIA.

Lugones, M., 2010, ‘Towards a Decolonial Feminism’, Hypatia vol. 25, no. 4, pp 742-74.

Lugones, M., 2008, ‘The Coloniality of Gender’, in Worlds & Knowledges Otherwise, Spring, pp. 4-17.

Martin, O., 2013, ‘The African Union’s Mechanisms to Foster Gender Mainstreaming and Ensure Women’s Political Participation and Representation’, International IDEA, Strömsborg, Stockholm, Sweden.

McClintocK, A., 1995, ‘Imperial Leather: Race, Gender and sexuality in the colonial contest’, Gender Epistemologies in Africa.

McFadden, P., 2000, ‘Issues of Gender and Development from an African Feminist Perspective’, Lecture presented in honour of Dame Nita Barrow, at the entre for Gender and Development Studies, University of the West Indies, Bridgetown, Barbados, November, 2000.

Ndlovu-Gatsheni, S., 2013, Coloniality of Power in Postcolonial Africa: Myth of Decolonisation, Dakar: CODESRIA.

Nkenkana, A., 2014, ‘Building Critical Consciousness for Advancing African Renaissance: Case Study from Pan-African and Afrocentric Institutions’, Unpublished text.

Oyewumi, O., 2011, Gender epistemologies in Africa: Gendering Traditions, Spaces, Social Institutions, and Identities, Palgrave: Macmillan.

Oyewumi, O., 1997, The Invention of Women: Making an African sense of Western Gender Discourses, University of Minnesota Press, United States of America.

Parpart, J.L., 1995, ‘Gender, Patriarchy and Development in Africa: The Zimbabwean case’, Working paper #254, Women and International Development, Michigan State University.

Quijano, A., 2000, ‘The Coloniality of Power and Social Classification’, Journal of World-Systems Research, 6 (2), (Summer/Fall 2000a): 342-386.

Sankara, T., 2007, Women’s liberation and the African freedom struggle, New York: Panaf.

Vaughan, R. P., 2012, ‘Gender Equality and Transnational Civil Society: Shifting global power relations and the post-MDG Agenda’, Global Thematic Consultation, Institute of Education, University of London, October.

Author Biography

Akhona Nkenkana

Survey Statistician, Department of Statistics, Pretoria, South Africa. Email: anakhona@gmail.com

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