Changing family strategies as a response to colonial challenge: Microanalytic observations on Siin/Senegal 1890-1960

authored by
Brigitte Reinwald
Abstract

The economic and social impacts of colonization on African societies are reflected, at the microlevel, by changing family structures and patterns of behavior. In order to assess the symptoms and the extent of the change, unilinear models of "modernization" have to be abandoned in favor of a concept that takes into consideration the relationship between modes of production and family strategies, on the one hand, and the position of the actors involved in the colonial process, on the other. As the example of the Siin-Siin, an agrarian Senegalese society, shows, the family as a social and economic unit has adapted to externally determined market processes and monetarized relations of distribution in the colonial context, by entering a transitional stage. This stage is characterized by individual concepts of property and rights, overlapping with collectively determined, age- and gender-ranked structures and norms of behavior.

External Organisation(s)
Universität Hamburg
Type
Article
Journal
History of the Family
Volume
2
Pages
183-195
No. of pages
13
ISSN
1081-602X
Publication date
1997
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
History, Sociology and Political Science, Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1016/S1081-602X(97)90005-1 (Access: Closed)