ABSTRACT

Sambach brings together an ethnograhic study of a school and community in East Africa. Stambach focuses on the role school plays in the development of the children's identity and relationships to their parents and community, as well as in the development of the region. At issue here are the competing influences of Western modernity and the cultural traditions of East Africa-ideas about gender roles, sexuality, identity, and family and communal obligations are all at stake. Stambach looks at the controversial practice of female circumcision in the context of school and community teachings about girls' bodies and examines cultural signifiers like music, clothing and food to discuss the tensions in the region.

chapter 1|29 pages

1 “What Educated Youth Do These Days”

Divergent Views Of Secondary Schooling

chapter 2|18 pages

Schooling, Inheritance, and Banana Groves

Signs And Symbols Of Local Life

chapter 3|32 pages

3 “Should We Drink Banana Beer or Coca—Cola?”

Redefining The Signs Of Traditionalism

chapter 4|31 pages

“Education Is My Husband”

Generational Transformations

chapter 5|23 pages

5 “Boys, Preserve Your Bullets; Girls, Lock Your Boxes”

Gendered Messages In Classes And The Curriculum

chapter 6|27 pages

“Things with Socks”

Student Life And Popular Culture

chapter 7|13 pages

“Mountains Never Meet But People Do”

Relationships Built Through Schooling