Tag Archives: kinship

“To put men in a bottle”: Eroticism, kinship, female power, and transactional sex in Maputo, Mozambique

By Christian Groes-Green
Groes-Green

Eroticism, kinship, and gender all intersect in transactional sexual relationships between young women known as curtidoras and older white men in Maputo, Mozambique. I draw on postcolonial feminism to argue that curtidoras’ erotic powers are a central part of sexual–economic exchanges with men and that senior female kin are deeply involved in processes of seduction and extraction of money. I conceptualize relationships between curtidoras, female kin, and male partners as “gendered triads of reciprocity” to unsettle Western stereotypes of female victims and patriarchal structures in Africa. Transactional sex often makes the partners mutually dependent and emotionally vulnerable, and, although moralities of exchange collide, young women tend to redistribute accumulated money from men among female seniors and kin.

Posted in Articles - Volume 40, Issue 1 (February 2013), Volume 40, Issue 1 (February 2013) | Also tagged , , , , , | Comments closed

Kinship as gift and theft: Acts of succession in Mayotte and Israel

By Michael Lambek

When kinship is viewed through the lens of succession rather than reproduction, conflict between siblings becomes salient and the gift of kinship can be experienced as theft. Developing an approach to kinship as ethically constituted through acts, I draw on the biblical story of Jacob and Esau to frame an account of succession in Mayotte that transpires in the register of spirit possession. This account follows the lives of two sisters I first described in this journal in 1988.

Posted in Archives, Articles - Volume 38, Issue 1 (February 2011), Volume 38, Issue 1 (February 2011) | Also tagged , , , , , | Comments closed