Contingent Lives: Fertility, Time, and Aging in West Africa
Contingent Lives: Fertility, Time, and Aging in West Africa
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Abstract
Most women in the West use contraceptives in order to avoid having children. But in rural Gambia and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa, many women use contraceptives for the opposite reason—to have as many children as possible. Using ethnographic and demographic data from a three-year study in rural Gambia, this book explains this seemingly counterintuitive fact by juxtaposing two very different understandings of the life course: one is a linear, Western model that equates aging and the ability to reproduce with the passage of time, the other a Gambian model that views aging as contingent on the cumulative physical, social, and spiritual hardships of personal history, especially obstetric trauma. Viewing each of these two models from the perspective of the other, the book produces fresh understandings of the classical anthropological subjects of reproduction, time, and aging as culturally shaped within women's conjugal lives.
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Front Matter
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1
Introduction
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2
Reproductive Tolls and Temporalities in Studies of Reproduction
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3
Setting, Data, and Methods
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4
Managing the Birth Interval: Child Spacing
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5
Disjunctures and Anomalies: Deconstructing Child Spacing
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6
Realizing a Reproductive Endowment in a Contingent Body
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7
Time-Neutral Reproduction, Time-Neutral Aging
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8
Reaping the Rewards of Reproduction: Morality, Retirement, and Repletion
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9
Discovering Our Habitus: Contingency and Linearity in Western Obstetric Observations
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10
Rethinking Fertility, Time, and Aging
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End Matter
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