‘The Men Seldom Suffer a Woman to Sit Down’: The Historical Development of the Stereotype of the ‘Lazy African’

‘The Men Seldom Suffer a Woman to Sit Down’: The Historical Development of the Stereotype of the ‘Lazy African’

Author: 
Rönnbäck, Klas
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Date published: 
2014
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
African Studies
Source: 
African Studies, Vol. 73 , Issue No. 2, August 2014, pp. 211-227
ISSN: 
0002-0184
Abstract: 

This article studies the historical development of the racist stereotype of the ‘lazy African’ in the early modern period, specifically looking at how Europeans explained the stereotype. Previous research has argued that the stereotype can be explained either by its function as way of justifying labour coercion such as slavery, or as a consequence of an idea of a ‘tropical exuberance’ in West Africa. In this article, it is argued that previous research on this topic largely has missed what perhaps was the most important factor, suggested already by Ester Boserup: that the gendered division of labour present in precolonial West Africa, which was unfamiliar to the European observers in many ways, was crucial for the rise of the stereotype

Language: 

CITATION: Rönnbäck, Klas. ‘The Men Seldom Suffer a Woman to Sit Down’: The Historical Development of the Stereotype of the ‘Lazy African’ . : Taylor & Francis , 2014. African Studies, Vol. 73 , Issue No. 2, August 2014, pp. 211-227 - Available at: https://library.au.int/‘-men-seldom-suffer-woman-sit-down’-historical-development-stereotype-‘lazy-african’-51