1. Searching for success: boys, family aspirations, and opportunities in Gabon, ca. 1900-1940.
- Author
-
Rich J
- Subjects
- Child, Child Behavior ethnology, Child Behavior physiology, Child Behavior psychology, Child Guidance economics, Child Guidance education, Child Guidance history, Child Guidance legislation & jurisprudence, Family Characteristics ethnology, Family Relations ethnology, Family Relations legislation & jurisprudence, Gabon ethnology, History, 20th Century, Humans, Male, Missionaries, Religion history, Socioeconomic Factors, Child Welfare economics, Child Welfare ethnology, Child Welfare history, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare psychology, Education economics, Education history, Education legislation & jurisprudence, Employment economics, Employment history, Employment legislation & jurisprudence, Employment psychology, Parent-Child Relations ethnology, Parent-Child Relations legislation & jurisprudence, Religious Missions economics, Religious Missions history, Religious Missions legislation & jurisprudence, Religious Missions psychology, Social Change history, Transients and Migrants education, Transients and Migrants history, Transients and Migrants legislation & jurisprudence, Transients and Migrants psychology
- Abstract
Boys growing up in rural Gabon between 1900 and 1940 negotiated with many challenges: the rise of migrant labor, famines and hardships brought on by World War I, the growth of Christianity and African-based spiritual traditions, and the undermining of clans, which had been the main form of social and political organization in the nineteenth century. Parents, extended family members, missionaries, and European businesses recruited boys to serve their varied interests. Boys in turn developed new self-understandings by leaving their homes as students, workers, and clients of older men. This article examines the life histories of four boys to trace the successes and challenges that individual boys encountered in this turbulent era. Interestingly, older biological relatives of boys generally succeeded in maintaining their authority over children living far from home, although the education and wages that boys received forced older men to offer boys more benefits.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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