Skip to main content
Journal cover image

Gendered Agendas: The Secrets Scholars Keep about Yorùbá-Atlantic Religion

Publication ,  Journal Article
Matory, JL
Published in: Gender & History
November 1, 2003

Whereas scholars have often described the material interests served by any given social group's selective narration of history, this article catches scholars in the act of selectively narrating Yorùbá-Atlantic cultural history in the service of their own faraway activist projects. Anthropologist Ruth Landes' re-casting of the Afro-Brazilian Candomblá religion as an instance of primitive matriarchy not only encouraged feminists abroad but also led Brazilian nationalist power-brokers to marginalise the male, and often reputedly homosexual, priests who give the lie to Landes's interpretation. In the service of a longdistance Yorùbá nationalist agenda, sociologist Oyeronke Oyewumi has declared traditional Yorùbá society ‘genderless’, and found, among both North American feminist scholars and Yorùbá male scholars, allies in concealing the copious evidence of gender and gender inequality in Yorùbá cultural history. What these historical constructions lack in truth value they make up for in their power to mobilise new communities and alliances around the defence of a shared secret. The article addresses how politically tendentious scholarship on gender has inspired new social hierarchies and boundaries through the truths that some high-profile scholars have chosen to silence.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Gender & History

DOI

ISSN

0953-5233

Publication Date

November 1, 2003

Volume

15

Issue

3

Start / End Page

409 / 439

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing

Related Subject Headings

  • Gender Studies
  • 4405 Gender studies
  • 4303 Historical studies
  • 2103 Historical Studies
  • 1699 Other Studies in Human Society
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Matory, J. L. (2003). Gendered Agendas: The Secrets Scholars Keep about Yorùbá-Atlantic Religion. Gender & History, 15(3), 409–439. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0953-5233.2003.00314.x
Matory, J. L. “Gendered Agendas: The Secrets Scholars Keep about Yorùbá-Atlantic Religion.” Gender & History 15, no. 3 (November 1, 2003): 409–39. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0953-5233.2003.00314.x.
Matory JL. Gendered Agendas: The Secrets Scholars Keep about Yorùbá-Atlantic Religion. Gender & History. 2003 Nov 1;15(3):409–39.
Matory, J. L. “Gendered Agendas: The Secrets Scholars Keep about Yorùbá-Atlantic Religion.” Gender & History, vol. 15, no. 3, Blackwell Publishing, Nov. 2003, pp. 409–39. Manual, doi:10.1111/j.0953-5233.2003.00314.x.
Matory JL. Gendered Agendas: The Secrets Scholars Keep about Yorùbá-Atlantic Religion. Gender & History. Blackwell Publishing; 2003 Nov 1;15(3):409–439.
Journal cover image

Published In

Gender & History

DOI

ISSN

0953-5233

Publication Date

November 1, 2003

Volume

15

Issue

3

Start / End Page

409 / 439

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing

Related Subject Headings

  • Gender Studies
  • 4405 Gender studies
  • 4303 Historical studies
  • 2103 Historical Studies
  • 1699 Other Studies in Human Society