Five women of Sennar : culture and change in central Sudan
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Five women of Sennar : culture and change in central Sudan
(Oxford studies in African affairs)
Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1991
- Other Title
-
5 women of Sennar
Available at / 8 libraries
-
Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, Kyoto Universityアフリカ専攻
367.2429||Ken91091931
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Sudan, the largest country in Africa, has become an increasingly familiar place in the last few years as television screens illustrate the political, economic, and ecological disasters that have overtaken many of its people. The far west and the eastern provinces have been badly hit by the long drought, while the central area has recently suffered from flooding. Meanwhile, political strife has been steadily tearing the south apart and developments such as rapid urban growth, large-scale population movements, and monetary inflation have led to social unrest. For Sudanese women especially times are changing - and not only to their disadvantage. Everywhere they are becoming more independent and confident and assuming new responsibilities as their menfolk leave to seek work abroad. Susan Kenyon looks at the developments in Sudanese society through the eyes and words of five women from the town of Sennar in Blue Nile Province. They talk about their families and homes, their hopes and aspirations, their work and their social lives. Their accounts offer insight into contemporary life in a major developing country and the changing role of women within its society.
Table of Contents
- I. Introduction: The Town of Sennar
- Society and kinship in Sennar
- Women and the religious life
- Women and work in Sennar
- II. Five Women of Sennar: al Mushata: traditional hairdresser
- Sitt al Kushuk: market woman
- al Diya: midwife
- Servant of God: faith-healer and seeress
- al Umiya: leader of the tombura zar cult
- III. Women's Work, Women's Ways: culture and change in Central Sudan
by "Nielsen BookData"