In African Women, the author of the highly acclaimed and best-selling memoir Kaffir Boy tells the deeply moving, often shocking, but ultimately inspiring stories of his grandmother, mother, and sister. Coping with abuse, gambling, drunkenness, and infidelity from the men they love or have been forced to marry, all three women defy African tradition, and the poverty and violence of life in a modern urban society, to make fulfilling lives for themselves and those they love in the belly of the apartheid beast in South Africa.
Granny is sold to her future husband in their homeland - he pays the traditional bride price, lobola, agreed upon by their two families - and after fathering her three children, he deserts her for another woman. When Granny's daughter Geli comes of age, it's not surprising that Granny forces her to marry an older man, Jackson Mathabane, who might be less likely to desert a young wife.
The marriage of Geli and Jackson is fraught with drama from the very beginning. Geli and her still-to-be-born first child (the author) are almost victims of witchcraft, saved at the last moment by a relative who discovers the perpetrator and rescues both mother and child. Jackson drinks and gambles, takes a mistress, beats his wife, and when Geli flees with the children to her aunt's house, demands all of them - his property - back with righteous indignation and the weight of African tribal tradition on his side.
Mathabane's sister Florah is swept up in the student rebellion against apartheid in the mid-1970s, which left hundreds of young blacks dead. Much later, a single mother looking for love and protection in the dangerous world of Alexandra, a black ghetto of Johannesburg, Florah falls in love with a notorious gangster who proves to be more than she can handle.
The stories of Florah, Geli, and Granny are told in their own words in alternating chapters that demonstrate how similar are the problems faced by each generation: all three women discover the need for an independent income in order to care for themselves and for their children; all three are the victims of the traditional assumption that women are property, commodities bought and sold by men; all three suffer from the terrible hardship imposed not only on women but also on black men by the system of apartheid in South Africa.
But what stays with the reader of this family saga is the indomitable spirit of these three women - their honesty, faith, and even hopefulness in the face of the intolerable conditions under which they live. African Women is a passionate narrative, as inspiring as it is horrifying, a woman's story for our time. What is most surprising perhaps, and gratifying, is that the stories of Granny, Geli, and Florah are brought to life by the pen of a man, the generously gifted and enormously sympathetic Mark Mathabane.
The World of the African Woman
African women, Pan-Africanism and African renaissance
" While recognizing the inherent violence and brutality of the colonial encounter, the essays in this lively volume show that African women were not simply the hapless victims of European political rule.
... epic retreats . You must go and lose yourself in the village of Mlomp while there is still time . Little trails snaking between walls of red earth , monu- mental entryways flanked by chiseled col- SENEGALESE INFANTRY MEN EMBARKING FOR ...
This 1973 book analyses the changing position of women in an urban context in sub-Saharan Africa.
Harrington, Julia. "African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights." In Women and International Human Rights Law, vol. 2, ed. Kelly D. Askin and Dorean Koenig. Ardsley, N.Y.: Transnational Publishers, 1998. Hassim, Shireen.
... author, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2005, Rwanda. 27. Human Rights Watch (HRW), World Report 1995 (New York: Human ... World Report 1996 (New York: Human Rights Watch, 1996). 28. Interviews by the author, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2005, Rwanda ...
African Women and Feminism: Reflecting on the Politics of Sisterhood
This book provides an in-depth exploration of African women's roles in society from precolonial periods to the contemporary era.
Women in Africa and the African Diaspora examines the role and place of women of the African diaspora. Contributors clarify the concept, methodology, and projected guidelines for studies of women...