IJAHS 57:3 (2024) Special Issue: First Ladies of Africa—Beyond Femocracy or Wifeism?
By Guest Editor: Jacqueline-Bethel Tchouta Mougoué
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Abstract: This special issue explores the complex relationship between women and political power in Africa. The contributors probe the various ways elite African women access and wield political authority in history, shedding light on both the public admiration and criticisms faced by powerful, political women. The contributors analyze the historical actions of women who gain influence from their husbands’ political power beyond the roles theorized as “wifeism” or “femocrats.” By examining the lives of prominent women in Ghana, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda through a historical and feminist lens, the authors provide a nuanced understanding of the informal yet significant impact of politically powerful women within the orbit of prominent male politicians. They contextualize and historicize the roles of these women as they shape national political culture in Africa throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
The following individual articles are also available online:
- A First Lady’s Rise, Fall, and Reemergence: Fatma Karume’s Political and Diplomatic Evolution in Zanzibar (23 pages)
- Femocracy Revisited: Feminism and the State in Selected African Feminist Historical Studies (5 pages)
- First Ladies of Africa—Beyond Femocracy or Wifeism?: An Introduction (8 pages)
- Nokukhanya Luthuli as First Lady of the African National Congress (19 pages)
- “Love her or Hate her”: The Complex Legacy of First Lady Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings (21 pages)
- “This Woman Is a Traitor”: Miria Kalule Obote and the Pain of Presidential Politics in Post-Colonial Uganda (17 pages)
- “We are Born Equal”: Graça Machel, Transnational Feminist (15 pages)