BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20260531T104610EDT-17366BOiM0@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20260531T144610Z DESCRIPTION:In Making Modern Girls: A History of Girlhood\, Labour\, and So cial Development in Colonial Lagos (2014)\, historian Abosede George urges scholars of childhood and youth in Africa\, to ‘girl’ the subject of thei r study. Too often\, she and others have pointed out\, historians have ass umed that the ‘youths’ who appear frequently in accounts of colonial and p ostcolonial politics\, especially\, are gendered adolescent and male. In t his definition of ‘youth’\, girls are left out.\n\nThe purpose of this pap er is twofold. Firstly\, it explores what a history of South African girlh ood might look like. Avoiding what some historians of childhood and youth have dubbed the ‘agency trap’—a narrow definition of agency-as-resistance which frequently excludes more than it brings to light—the paper draws att ention to the surprising frequency with which girls turn up in the South A frican archive. They appear in court records as both ‘delinquents’ and the subjects of state care\; in advertisements for consumer products in the t wentieth century\; as the authors of diaries\, letters\, and stories\; as pupils and as sex workers and factory workers\; as refugees during conflic t\, and as prophetesses. These rich sources build up a complex portrait of the lived experience of girlhood in modern South Africa.\n\nBut secondly\ , attentive to the changing meanings of ‘girlhood’ over time\, and particu larly as the category was inflected in relation to race and class\, the pa per asks how the addition of girls into South African history might shift the ways in which we approach this history. Put another way\, how would a ‘girl’s eye view’ reshape familiar arguments and frameworks?\n\nSponsored by: Department of History and Classical Studies & the Institute for Gender \, Sexuality\, and Feminist Studies\n DTSTART:20191129T210000Z DTEND:20191129T230000Z LOCATION:Rm. 738\, Centre de recherches phytotechniques\, CA\, QC\, St Anne de Bellevue\, H9X 3V9\, 21 111\, chemin Lakeshore SUMMARY:Tampax\, Snowdrops\, and Girls Throwing Axes: Writing Girlhood into Modern South African History\,” a talk by Dr. Sarah Emily Duff\, Assistan t Professor of World and African History\, Colby College URL:/history/channels/event/tampax-snowdrops-and-girls -throwing-axes-writing-girlhood-modern-south-african-history-talk-dr-sarah -302846 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR