This article explores the discursive construct of globalisation through the prism of gender and its implications for and effects on the quest for an African Renaissance. It argues that since humans are gendered, so human institutions and discourses such as globalisation are permeated and informed by the discourse of gender and the hierarchies inherent in them. Since discourses on the African Renaissance are conceptualised and framed within the hegemonic discourse of globalisation, they become entangled in globalisation's gendered nature and become either complicit or subversive. the article identifies and discusses the multifaceted implications and effects of hegemonic, masculine neoliberal globalisation discourse on the various facets of t...
Contains fulltext : 99364.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article d...
The idea of a dual-sex system, which scholars such as Sofola (1998) lobby for, is an aspect of Afric...
Discourses of development, education, gender, feminism and critical linguistics arrive in Africa fro...
This article explores the discursive construct of globalisation through the prism of gender and its ...
One of the major issues this book examines is what the African experience and identity have contribu...
The challenges that face African universities and intellectual communities are many and daunting. Th...
This article aims to show that there is an entanglement between representations of the body and gend...
The challenges that face African universities and intellectual communities are many and daunting. T...
This article explores the interaction between Globalization and the African Renaissance. Its main c...
Corporate globalization is advancing marginalization of African societies in the economic global sph...
Abstract. Discursive Challenges for African Feminisms. In what follows, I draw attention to the nece...
This paper conducts a comparative case study of how gender discourse in Igbo society has evolved fro...
Coloniality of gender speaks to the perennial question of the liberation of women from various forms...
The global perspectives adopted in this volume by the authors, from different academic disciplines a...
Neoliberal globalization can threaten the growth of a global civil society that sanctions power-shar...
Contains fulltext : 99364.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article d...
The idea of a dual-sex system, which scholars such as Sofola (1998) lobby for, is an aspect of Afric...
Discourses of development, education, gender, feminism and critical linguistics arrive in Africa fro...
This article explores the discursive construct of globalisation through the prism of gender and its ...
One of the major issues this book examines is what the African experience and identity have contribu...
The challenges that face African universities and intellectual communities are many and daunting. Th...
This article aims to show that there is an entanglement between representations of the body and gend...
The challenges that face African universities and intellectual communities are many and daunting. T...
This article explores the interaction between Globalization and the African Renaissance. Its main c...
Corporate globalization is advancing marginalization of African societies in the economic global sph...
Abstract. Discursive Challenges for African Feminisms. In what follows, I draw attention to the nece...
This paper conducts a comparative case study of how gender discourse in Igbo society has evolved fro...
Coloniality of gender speaks to the perennial question of the liberation of women from various forms...
The global perspectives adopted in this volume by the authors, from different academic disciplines a...
Neoliberal globalization can threaten the growth of a global civil society that sanctions power-shar...
Contains fulltext : 99364.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)This article d...
The idea of a dual-sex system, which scholars such as Sofola (1998) lobby for, is an aspect of Afric...
Discourses of development, education, gender, feminism and critical linguistics arrive in Africa fro...