First Find Your Child a Good Mother: The Construction of Self in Two African Communities

Voorkant
Rutgers University Press, 1992 - 241 pagina's

Through a systematic comparison of the life circumstances, child-rearing practices, and personalities of the FulBe and their former slaves, the RiimaayBe, this book develops an alternative theory of the way personality is formed in the Fulani society of West Africa. Riesman discusses the different characters, economies, and life plans of adult men and women of both groups, focusing on their ideas about the value of relatives. He further presents detailed observations of child-rearing practices, and concludes that the FulBe and RiimaayBe do not differ in these practices. Contrasting Fulani and Western notions of parenting, he suggests that child-rearing practices are themselves irrelevant to the formation of adult personality, but that a people's ideas about the meaning of life, social relations, and the development of character are very important. Finally, Riesman outlines a sociocultural theory of personality and its formation, and uses this theory to make sense of the differences between FulBe and RiimaayBe.

 

Inhoudsopgave

Reflexivity in Humanistic Anthropology
1
Introduction
8
Global Fulani Society
14
Economy
30
What Life Is All About
43
7
90
14
124
Later Childhood
130
Child Development in Fulani Ethnopsychology
160
Self Identity and Personality
184
Theoretical Implications by Carol Trosset
239
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