“Culture Stops Development!”: Bijagó Youth and the Appropriation of Developmentalist Discourse in Guinea-B


Autoria(s): Bordonaro, Lorenzo
Data(s)

31/12/2008

08/12/2014

Resumo

African Studies Review, Volume 52, Number 2, pp. 69–

Since the 1960s scholars have criticized the notion of development, arguing that the rhetoric and practice of international development serve imperialistic interests, destroying local orders and colonizing consciousnesses. Through the analysis of the “will to be modern” of a group of young boys living in Bubaque in the Bijagó Islands (Guinea-Bissau), this article shows how the very notion of development can be reworked and employed in an African context, becoming a means for exerting social demands against traditional authorities, and an idiom to express aspirations, needs, and ri

Identificador

1555-2462

http://hdl.handle.net/10362/2688

Idioma(s)

en_UK

Palavras-Chave #Guiné Bissau #Juventude Bijagó
Tipo

other

Direitos

openAccess