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This edited collection explores the lives, consequences and motivations of female researchers in Africa, giving unprecedented insights into how their gender—and sometimes their ethnicity and age—impacted on their research experiences, and how doing research in Africa affected them as women. Each contributor considers her place or position in the research process and provides a vivid portrait of that experience. Drawing on research findings from Nigeria, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Ghana, Guinea, Malawi, Uganda and other African countries, the book looks at gender and identity as a female researcher in Africa; relationships with 'others'; and unique methodological challenges for female researchers in Africa. With refreshing candour, each chapter challenges other researchers in Africa (both women and men), to integrate critical reflections of gender and diverse gendered field experiences into their work. Women Researching in Africa will be of interest to students and scholars across a range of disciplines including development studies, anthropology, geography, gender studies and international studies.
In reggae song after reggae song Bob Marley and other reggae singers speak of the Promised Land of Ethiopia. “Repatriation is a must!” they cry. The Rastafari have been travelling to Ethiopia since the movement originated in Jamaica in 1930s. They consider it the Promised Land, and repatriation is a cornerstone of their faith. Though Ethiopians see Rastafari as immigrants, the Rastafari see themselves as returning members of the Ethiopian diaspora. In Visions of Zion, Erin C. MacLeod offers the first in-depth investigation into how Ethiopians perceive Rastafari and Rastafarians within Ethiopia and the role this unique immigrant community plays within Ethiopian society. Rastafari are unus...
"This Movement is Not About the Man Alone": Toward a Rastafari Woman's Studies Shamara Wyllie Alhassan Testimony: Charting the Matriarchal Shift in the Rastafari Movement Deena-Marie Beresford Shifting Models of Group Formation: Communes, Houses and Mansions of Rastafari Ennis B. Edmonds The Legacy of Charismatic Leadership in the Rastafari Movement Michael Barnett A Rastafari Cultural Institution: Herb Camps in the City Jahlani Niaah Bob Marley, Emerging Rasta 1966-1970 Dean MacNeil Black Racial Identity Theory, Nigrescence, Rastafari: Propositions on Black and Rastafari Identity Charles Price Livity and Law Richard C. Salter "They took us by boat and we're coming back by plane": An Assessment of Rastafari and Repatriation Giulia Bonacci Rastafari Citizenship Strategies in Ethiopia: Ethnic Existence, Diaspora Claims, Resident Identification Erin C. Macleod Testimony: Ivan Coore, a Rastafari in the Promised Land Derek Bishton Commentary: Reflections on 2020 through a Rastafari Lens Michael Barnett
Since its debut manga RG Veda, CLAMP has steadily asserted itself as one of the most widely renowned teams of manga artists, leaving a durable imprint in every established genre while also devising novel formulas along the way. Endowed not only with stylistic distinctiveness but also comprehensive cultural structure, CLAMP's output is distinguished by unique worldbuilding flair and visual vitality. Exploring a selection of CLAMP manga as well as anime it inspired, this volume examines CLAMP's broader philosophical underpinnings, its dedication to the invention of elaborate narrative constructs, its legendary passion for multilayered universes, and its symbolic interpretation of human identity. Throughout, the work highlights the team's incremental creation of a graphic constellation of unparalleled appeal.
Since its inception as an art form, anime has engaged with themes, symbols and narrative strategies drawn from the realm of magic. In recent years, the medium has increasingly turned to magic specifically as a metaphor for a wide range of cultural, philosophical and psychological concerns. This book first examines a range of Eastern and Western approaches to magic in anime, addressing magical thinking as an overarching concept which unites numerous titles despite their generic and tonal diversity. It then explores the collusion of anime and magic with reference to specific topics. A close study of cardinal titles is complemented by allusions to ancillary productions in order to situate the medium's fascination with magic within an appropriately broad historical context.
Anstoß zur Entdeckung eines unbekannten Kults der Dogon in Mali gab eine in den 1950er- und 1960er-Jahren zusammengetragene Privatsammlung mit mehr als 500 steinernen Objekten. Der Kult mit Fokus auf kunstvoll skulptierten Steinen kam Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts zum Erliegen. Formenreichtum und stilistischer Ausdruck der anthropomorph oder zoomorph geformten Steine beeindrucken und erinnern an archäologische Funde aus Guinea oder Sierra Leone. Der Autor stellt die Sammlung vor, beleuchtet Hintergründe und Ausrichtung des Kults und belegt, dass Stein in Afrika häufiger zur Herstellung sakraler Objekte verwendet wurde als bislang angenommen.
This book examines the relationship between inequalities and identities in the context of an unprecedented state advocacy of human rights with a distinct emphasis on (ethnic) group rights in post-civil war Ethiopia. The analysis is set against the background of a dramatic state remaking by a rebellion movement (the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front – EPRDF) that seized control of the Ethiopian state in 1991, after a decisive battlefield victory over an unpopular regime. The new government of former rebels pledged to institute a new system of ethnic self-government that celebrated ethnic diversity with a firm pledge to guarantee basic human rights. After nearly three decades...
Als populäre Ausdrucksformen repräsentieren Tanzaufführungen auf den Showbühnen Addis Abebas und zu Festivitäten individuelle, ethnische und nationale Aushandlungsprozesse von Kultur. Die Untersuchung beschreibt, wie Tanzperformances im urbanen Raum die Idee des ethnischen Föderalismus in Äthiopien unterstützen und zur Bildung eines nationalen Narrativs beitragen. Hierbei wird die politische und persönliche Wirkungsebene von Tanz beleuchtet und unterschiedliche ethnische Tanzstile beschrieben. Der Band zeigt, wie kreative Prozesse, künstlerische Adaptionen und individuelle Vorstellungen äthiopischer Identität das Verständnis von Tanz sowie dessen Bedeutung für die Konstruktion der Nation formen.