essay

Dancing women and colonial men: the NWAOBIALA of 1925

'wicked' women and the reconfiguration of gender in africaPortsmouth, N.H. • Published In 2001 • Pages: 109-129

By: Bastian, Misty L..

Abstract
Bastian has written an account of the Igbo Woman's War of 1929. The war, really a market riot, involved older married women attacking younger unmarried women in the marketplace and stripping them naked. The riot stemmed from the NWAOBIALA movement in which bands of women ritually swept public spaces. Sweeping was both a common domestic chore and part of an annual purification rite to appease the earth god who influenced fertility. The movement was interpreted by colonial officials as a conservative movement about sanitation and the evils of prostitution. Bastian's interpretation is more complex and sees the movement as a reaction to an overall loss of women's power. An expanding market economy and construction of new roadways and railroads bypassed women's traditional control of bush roads, markets, and their daughters' labor.
Subjects
Gender status
External relations
Political movements
culture
Igbo
HRAF PubDate
2003
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Western Africa
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 2001
Field Date
not specified
Coverage Date
1925-1930
Coverage Place
Owerri, Imo State, Nigeria
Notes
Misty L. Bastian
Includes bibliographical references (p. 128-129)
LCCN
00040882
LCSH
Igbo (African people)