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Keeping House in Lusaka

AUTHOR: Karen Tranberg Hansen
ISBN: 0231081421

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         Editorial Review

Keeping House in Lusaka
- Book Review,
by Karen Tranberg Hansen

Choice
Hansen captures the complexity of life and the hard choices that urban people (and especially women) must make, with brilliant sensitivity to personal triumphs as well as crushing disappointments. Readers meet brave and resourceful people in a spirited book that manages to be innovative, accessible, informative, and uplifting, while remaining realistic.

Book Description
Opens a window on the experiences of urban people living through one of Africa's most dramatic economic declines in the postcolonial era by focusing on such broad themes as household dynamics, gender politics, and informal economy in Mtendere.

About the Author
Karen Tranberg Hansen is professor of anthropology at Northwestern University.


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         Book Review

Keeping House in Lusaka
- Book Reviews,
by Karen Tranberg Hansen

Keeping House in Lusaka

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The small, densely populated township of Mtendere affords an unobstructed view of the high-rise hotels and office buildings in Zambia's capital city of Lusaka - a vivid illustration of the proximity of poverty and wealth in urban Africa today. In Keeping House in Lusaka, Karen Tranberg Hansen draws on two decades of field research in this former squatters' colony to challenge assumptions about the rural-urban divide in Africa that have dominated the thinking of much of Western social science. Focusing on such broad themes as household dynamics, gender politics, and informal economy in Mtendere, the book opens a window on the experiences of urban people living through one of Africa's most dramatic economic declines in the postcolonial era. Keeping House in Lusaka argues that African urbanism is not purely a product of colonialism but a result of a wide variety of influences both local and foreign. Set against the backdrop of Zambia's colonial history and its political and economic conditions since independence in 1964, Hansen's study provides rich insight into the cultural effects of rapid urbanization and development in the Third World.

SYNOPSIS

Opens a window on the experiences of urban people living through one of Africa's most dramatic economic declines in the postcolonial era by focusing on such broad themes as household dynamics, gender politics, and informal economy in Mtendere.

FROM THE CRITICS

Choice

Hansen captures the complexity of life and the hard choices that urban people (and especially women must make, with brilliant sensitivity to personal triumphs as well as crushing disappointments. Readers meet brave and resourceful people in a spirited book that manages to be innovative, accessible, informative, and uplifting, while remaining realistic.

Booknews

A 20-year-long field study about the lives of residents of Mtendereone of Lusaka, Zambia's many low-income areas. Confronts issues such as Lusaka's colonial past, African urbanization, and the dramatic economic decline in Africa while also addressing such daily concerns as gender roles, housing, laws, job prospects, and kitchen parties. Some of the author's observations raise questions about the accepted intellectual framing of the issues of urbanization, housing, and the informal sector in development literature. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.


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