Making Good Women

There is a vast body of literature on how Africans have historically interacted with Christianity. One area in the discourse claims that Christianity and its extension, western education, shaped and in some cases succeeded in changing the gendered ideals and the very social fabric of society. This...

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Main Author: Abena Kyere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UJ Press 2023-07-01
Series:African Journal of Gender and Religion (AJGR)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/ajgr/article/view/2447
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author Abena Kyere
author_facet Abena Kyere
author_sort Abena Kyere
collection DOAJ
description There is a vast body of literature on how Africans have historically interacted with Christianity. One area in the discourse claims that Christianity and its extension, western education, shaped and in some cases succeeded in changing the gendered ideals and the very social fabric of society. This article deepens and adds nuance to the argument that missionary education shaped young women into prospective wives for clergymen in Ghana. Examining various works of literature, archival materials and in-depth interviews, the article reconstructs the trajectory of the clergy-wife position and concludes that missionary education aimed to remold the gendered spaces of Ghanaian society through the education of girls. However, this missionary ideal of a good woman who exemplified all the tenets of a godly Christian wife was to be found in the Clergy wife (CW). The paper concludes that the CW position led to the creation of a privileged class of women and, thus, through this creation, the missionary project of creating an ideal woman could be deemed successful.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2707-2991
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publishDate 2023-07-01
publisher UJ Press
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series African Journal of Gender and Religion (AJGR)
spelling doaj-art-466825b4500b47e4863b9b33d93a24e32025-01-08T08:59:48ZengUJ PressAfrican Journal of Gender and Religion (AJGR)2707-29912023-07-0129110.36615/ajgr.v29i1.2447Making Good WomenAbena Kyere0University of Ghana There is a vast body of literature on how Africans have historically interacted with Christianity. One area in the discourse claims that Christianity and its extension, western education, shaped and in some cases succeeded in changing the gendered ideals and the very social fabric of society. This article deepens and adds nuance to the argument that missionary education shaped young women into prospective wives for clergymen in Ghana. Examining various works of literature, archival materials and in-depth interviews, the article reconstructs the trajectory of the clergy-wife position and concludes that missionary education aimed to remold the gendered spaces of Ghanaian society through the education of girls. However, this missionary ideal of a good woman who exemplified all the tenets of a godly Christian wife was to be found in the Clergy wife (CW). The paper concludes that the CW position led to the creation of a privileged class of women and, thus, through this creation, the missionary project of creating an ideal woman could be deemed successful. https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/ajgr/article/view/2447Clergy wifeGhanaWomenMissionary educationChristianity
spellingShingle Abena Kyere
Making Good Women
African Journal of Gender and Religion (AJGR)
Clergy wife
Ghana
Women
Missionary education
Christianity
title Making Good Women
title_full Making Good Women
title_fullStr Making Good Women
title_full_unstemmed Making Good Women
title_short Making Good Women
title_sort making good women
topic Clergy wife
Ghana
Women
Missionary education
Christianity
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/ajgr/article/view/2447
work_keys_str_mv AT abenakyere makinggoodwomen