AltaMira Press
Pages: 296
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7591-0245-3 • Hardback • September 2003 • $131.00 • (£101.00)
978-0-7591-0246-0 • Paperback • September 2003 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
Gracia Clark is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Indiana University in Bloomington, and received her Ph.D. from Cambridge in social anthropology. She has worked with market traders in Kumasi, Ghana since 1978. She is the author of Onions are my Husband.
Part 1 Introduction: How Gender Works, in the Practice of Theory and Other Social Processes
Part 2 Part I: Concepts of Gender Within Economic Change
Part 3 Chapter 1: Archaeology and the Gender Without History
Part 4 Chapter 2: Rain and Cattle: Gendered Structures and Political Economy in Precolonial Pare, Tanzania
Part 5 Chapter 3: Woman-headed Households in Agrarian Societies: Not Just a Passing Phase
Part 6 Part II: Entrepreneurs as Women
Part 7 Chapter 4: Female Entrepreneurship in the Caribbean: A Multisite, Pilot Investigation of Gender and Work
Part 8 Chapter 5: Women, Modernity, and the Global Economy: Negotiating Gender and Work in Ifugao, Upland Philippines
Part 9 Chapter 6: Between Family and Market: Women and thew New Silk Road in Post-Soviet Kazakstan
Part 10 Part III: Love and Entitlements
Part 11 Chapter 7: Neoliberalism and Newar Economics of Practice: Gender and the Politics of Consciousness in a Nepalese Merchant Community
Part 12 Chapter 8: Why Would She Fight Her Family?: Indian Women's Negotiations of Discourses of Inheritance
Part 13 Chapter 9: Decision Making and Flows of Income and Expenses Among Households with Factory-Employed Members
Part 14 Part IV: Migration Engendered
Part 15 Chapter 10: Male Wealth and Claims to Motherhood: Gendered Resource Eaccess and Intergenerational Relations in the Gwembe Valley, Zambia
Part 16 Chapter 11: Age, Masculinity and Migration: Gender and Wage Labor Among Samburu Pastoralists in Northern Kenya
Part 17 Chapter 12: Women in a Brazilian Agricultural Frontier
This is a very interesting and important collection of articles...what unites these papers and makes them particularly interesting is threefold: all question assumptions that have been made about gendered organization and work; all do more than simply point out those assumptions, providing a re-analysis in each particular area; and all firmly ground their analyses in concrete data. It is not only this last which sets them apart from recent cultural studies, but also the fact that they do not seem to sacrifice more perceptive and nuanced interpretations in the process...[the articles] all show that it is in fact possible to do sensitive research that is underpinned by data.All of them not only provide useful critiques of previous approaches, but also move the discipline forward by adding new analyses to it.
— Susan A. Johnston, George Washington University; Anthropological Quarterly, Vol. 77, No. 1, Winter 2004