Description
All over the twentieth century and into the twenty-first, rates of widowhood have been remarkably high in Kenya. Yet in spite of their numbers, widows and their families exist at the margins of society, and their lives act as a barometer for the harsh realities of rural Kenya. Mutongi here argues that widows continue to exist by publicly airing their social, economic, and political problems, their “worries of the heart.” First of all aimed at the men in their community, and then their colonial rulers, this strategy changed after independence as widows more and more invoked the language of citizenship to demand their rights from the new leaders of Kenya—leaders whose failure to meet the needs of extraordinary citizens has led to deep disenchantment and altered Kenyans’ view of their colonial past. An innovative blend of ethnography and historical research, Worries of the Heart is a poignant narrative wealthy with insights into postcolonial Africa.
All over the twentieth century and into the twenty-first, rates of widowhood have been remarkably high in Kenya. Yet in spite of their numbers, widows and their families exist at the margins of society, and their lives act as a barometer for the harsh realities of rural Kenya. Mutongi here argues that widows continue to exist by publicly airing their social, economic, and political problems, their “worries of the heart.” First of all aimed at the men in their community, and then their colonial rulers, this strategy changed after independence as widows more and more invoked the language of citizenship to demand their rights from the new leaders of Kenya—leaders whose failure to meet the needs of extraordinary citizens has led to deep disenchantment and altered Kenyans’ view of their colonial past. An innovative blend of ethnography and historical research, Worries of the Heart is a poignant narrative wealthy with insights into postcolonial Africa.