The Great Upheaval: Women and Nation in Postwar Nigeria

The Great Upheaval

Women and Nation in Postwar Nigeria
 
Edition number: 1
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Date of Publication:
Number of Volumes: Print PDF
 
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Product details:

ISBN13:9780821423981
ISBN10:0821423983
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:334 pages
Size:229x152 mm
Weight:476 g
Language:English
480
Category:
Short description:

In this finely textured social and intellectual history of gender and nation making, Byfield captures the dynamism of women?s political engagement in postwar Nigeria. She illuminates the centrality of gender to the study of nationalism, offering new lines of inquiry into the late colonial era and its consequences for the future Nigerian state.

Long description:

This social and intellectual history of women?s political activism in postwar Nigeria reveals the importance of gender to the study of nationalism and poses new questions about Nigeria?s colonial past and independent future.

In the years following World War II, the women of Abeokuta, Nigeria, staged a successful tax revolt that led to the formation first of the Abeokuta Women?s Union and then of Nigeria?s first national women?s organization, the Nigerian Women?s Union, in 1949. These organizations became central to a new political vision, a way for women across Nigeria to define their interests, desires, and needs while fulfilling the obligations and responsibilities of citizenship. In The Great Upheaval, Judith A. Byfield has crafted a finely textured social and intellectual history of gender and nation making that not only tells a story of women?s postwar activism but also grounds it in a nuanced account of the complex tax system that generated the ?upheaval.?

Byfield captures the dynamism of women?s political engagement in Nigeria?s postwar period and illuminates the centrality of gender to the study of nationalism. She thus offers new lines of inquiry into the late colonial era and its consequences for the future Nigerian state. Ultimately, she challenges readers to problematize the collapse of her female subjects' greatest aspiration, universal franchise, when the country achieved independence in 1960.



?Byfield has written a meticulously documented history of women?s political activities during the first half of the twentieth century. The women of Abeokuta played a leading part in the history of economic change, nationalism, and eventual independence in colonial Nigeria, and Byfield?s study is a welcome addition to scholarly analysis of political and economic transformation in Nigeria and Africa in general during this crucial period.?