Beyond Colonial Politics of Identity: Being and Becoming Female Youth in Colonial Kenya

Author:

Ngutuku Elizabeth12ORCID,Okwany Auma3

Affiliation:

1. Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa, The London School of Economics and Political Science, Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, UK

2. Faculty of Humanities, University of Johannesburg, P.O. Box 524, Auckland Park 2006, South Africa

3. International Institute of Socal Studies of Erasmus University Rotterdam, Kortenaerkade 12, 2518 AX The Hague, The Netherlands

Abstract

This paper draws on biographical research among the Akamba and the Luo communities in Eastern and Western Kenya, respectively. Our research explored how practices of adolescence as a process, an institution, and a performance of identity interact with colonial modernities and imaginaries in complex ways. The biographical research was carried out predominantly with women born in the late colonial period in Kenya. We provide critical reflections on the process and affordances of our embodied storytelling approach, which we position as an Africanist methodology and a decolonial research practice. This research and approach provided women with a space to narrate and perform their lived experience, potentially disrupting epistemic inequities that are embedded in the way research on growing up in the past is carried out. The discussions show how colonialism interacted with other factors, including gender and generational power, tradition, girls’ agency, and other life characteristics like poverty and family situation, in order to influence the lived experiences of women. Going beyond the narratives of victimhood that characterise coming of age in similar spaces, we present women’s emergent, incomplete, and incongruent agency. We position this agency as the diverse ways in which people come to terms with their difficult contexts. The discussion also points to the need for unsettling the settled thinking about girlhood and coming of age in specific historical spaces in the global South.

Funder

ESRC/GCRF-funded Centre for Public Authority and International Development (CPAID) at the London School of Economics and Political Science

The Research Innovation Facility (RIF) of the International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University Rotterdam

Publisher

MDPI AG

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5. Brighenti, Andrea (2013). Urban Interstices: The Aesthetics and the Politics of the In-between, Ashgate.

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