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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Article
Cultural Practice in Côte d'Ivoire: An Ethnography of the Feminization of Funeral Expenses
Author(s)
Akissi Amandine KONAN, Sylvestre Bouhi TCHAN BI, Kando Amédée SOUMAHORO
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DOI:10.17265/2328-2177/2020.02.002
Affiliation(s)
Félix Houphouët-Boigny University, Abidjan-Côte d’Ivoire
ABSTRACT
The
“Letagonins”: a concept socially constructed to
designate the “beating” women of Ivorian society, evokes those who have as their
leitmotif, a self-realization through work. The purpose lies in their ability
to free themselves from male domination. This concept means in one of the local
Ivorian languages, notably the Gouro[1]: female boy. These women of Gouro ethnicity show a deep passion for the
marketing of food products in Abidjan. However, behind this passion for food is
their commitment to funeral expenses; a cultural activity customary lying with
agnatic parentage. The transgression of custom by the latter under the prism of
their social repositioning is the symbolic manifestation of the
destandardization of the traditional relationship between man and woman in the
organization of funerals in Gouro country, in the central West Ivorian.
Understanding this relational reconfiguration has fuelled our passion as a
researcher. In fact, ethnography has been mobilized as a method of observing
the funeral practices of these women. In this regard, the study traces the
strategies for negotiating access to the land as well as those used to
negotiate access to information.
KEYWORDS
funeral expenses, destandardization, ethnography, negotiating strategies, Côte d'Ivoire
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