“I am African, iko nini” : Generational Conflict and the Politics of Being in Nairobi
“I am African, iko nini” : Generational Conflict and the Politics of Being in Nairobi
In Nairobi, young urban professionals self-confidently position themselves as Africans, while they are simultaneously reproached for being ‘un-African’. I explore this economy of claims and how it relates to the way the lifestyles of young professionals become the focus of generational conflict. I follow how various actors use the notions African, Western, modern and traditional as reified concepts that comprise a discursive field of practices. Disentangling public debates and individual self-perceptions, it becomes clear that matters of cultural heritage, gerontocratic relations and intergenerational expectations, and shifts in gender and sexuality reflect a field of tension and ambivalence. Young urban professionals display a vibrant cosmopolitan way of being and are the visible results of social transformations that started with their grandparents.
CITATION: Spronk, Rachel. “I am African, iko nini” : Generational Conflict and the Politics of Being in Nairobi . : Brill , 2014. African Diaspora, Vol. 7, No. 2, 2014, pp. 205-233 - Available at: https://library.au.int/“i-am-african-iko-nini”-generational-conflict-and-politics-being-nairobi-29