Back in Youth: Social Unbecoming in the Study of West African Masculinities

African youth became a central research theme in anthropology and related disciplines in the early 2000s, drawing renewed attention to the lives and aspirations of a segment of the continent's population that, since the independence era, has become increasingly demographically dominant but soci...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jesper Bjarnesen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2023-12-01
Series:Africa Spectrum
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/00020397231211615
Description
Summary:African youth became a central research theme in anthropology and related disciplines in the early 2000s, drawing renewed attention to the lives and aspirations of a segment of the continent's population that, since the independence era, has become increasingly demographically dominant but socially and politically marginalised. Reflecting on an extended case study of male ex-combatants in urban Burkina Faso, this paper offers a critical reading of the anthropological scholarship on African youth, emphasising, first, that much of this literature is most usefully read as studies of diverse (West) African masculinities and, second, that the literature has underplayed the extent to which achievements of social progression tend to be acutely reversible in contexts of precarity or radical social change, throwing the unfortunate, as it were, back in youth.
ISSN:0002-0397
1868-6869