Available Formats
Daughters of the Goddess, Daughters of Imperialism: African Women, Culture, Power and Democracy
By (Author) Ifi Amadiume
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Zed Books Ltd
2nd April 2026
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Anthropology
Political structures / systems: democracy
Hardback
336
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Ifi Adadiume contrasts the collectivist, humanist culture of traditional African matriarchal heritage with the corrupt and oppressive culture of the imperialism that is the heritage of contemporary elite-led women's organizations. Amadiume examines the activities of such organizations in Nigeria, making comparisons with those in Britain and South Africa as well as in international movements; looking at the 1995 Beijing International Womens Conferences, she explores internationalism as an instrument of class reproduction.
Here Amadiume provides a detailed account of the structures and workings of local government in Nigeria and Britain as she raises theoretical and policy issues about civic groups, civil society and the nature of the late twentieth-century state. Finally, she draws lessons from her own experiences working in local government to suggest measures for true gender equity and the democratisation of politics in our increasingly multicultural and multiethnic societies. This book asks hard questions of contemporary feminist movements and provides the most detailed account available of Nigerian womens politics.
This Essential Amadiume edition includes a new foreword by the author in which she reflects on the moment at which the book was written, how it was initially received, and whether anything has changed since.
Ifi Amadiume is an award-winning poet and a political activist as well as an academic. She has lived in Nigeria and the UK and is currently associate professor at Dartmouth College, USA. There, she teaches in both the Department of Religion and the African-American Studies Programme.