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Oyeronke Oyewumi

 * This serves as a non academic source for relevant biographical information for the articles lead section:
 * Her book "The Invention of Women: Making an African Sense of Western Gender Discourses" is the greatest demonstration of her academic work.
 * "What Gender is Motherhood? Changing Yorùbá Ideals of Power, Procreation, and Identity in the Age of Modernity." is also a demonstration of the academic discourse she practices. This links well with the following non academic source.
 * The interview with Prof. Magubane, "Gender and Motherhood at Rhodes University" demonstrates Oyewumi's work outside academic constraints.
 * Her mention in 'A Short History of African Philosophy' testifies to her relevance and notability in the field.
 * '“YORUBA’S DON’T DO GENDER”: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF OYERONKE OYEWUMI’s' shows some criticism and reception of her work and would balance the article.

Final Draft
Oyèrónkẹ́ Oyèwùmí is a Nigerian feminist scholar and associate professor of sociology at Stony Brook University. She acquired her bachelor's degree at the University of Ibadan in Ibadan, Nigeria and went on to pursue her graduate degree in Sociology at the University of California, Berkeley.

Oyewumi's interdisciplinary work foregrounds an African vantage point that remains largely underrepresented in academia. Much of her academic research and writing has used African experiences to illuminate theoretical questions pertinent to a wide range of disciplines including sociology, political science, women studies, religion, history, and literature, all in an effort to broaden scholarly understanding to include non-Western cultures. In all of her work, Oyeronke Oyewumi attempts to provide a more nuanced understanding of these societies, thereby avoiding reductionist formulations.

In her 1997 monograph, The Invention of Women: Making an African Sense of Western Gender Discourses, she offers a postcolonial feminist critique of Western dominance in African studies. She explains that in spite of vast amounts of academic research claiming otherwise, the stratification of gender in Yoruba culture is entirely a colonial legacy. The book won the American Sociological Association's 1998 Distinguished Book Award in the Gender and Sex category.

The Invention of Women
In the Invention of Women, Oyewumi presents modern Yoruba gender stratification as a Western colonial construct. Through this deconstruction, she introduces an alternate method of understanding both Western and Yoruba cultures.

She begins by naming biological determinism as central to Western understanding of gender. This idea that biological differences serve as an organizing principle for societies is a Western philosophy that doesn’t transfer to Yoruba societies which do not use the body as the basis for any social roles. Nonetheless, Oyewumi explains how colonial institutions went onto impose this biological understanding of gender onto the Yoruba. Additionally, she tackles the incongruities in feminist theory that assert gender as a social construct and the subjugation of women as universal. Oyewumi argues to the contrary that gender was never socially constructed in Yoruba society and relative age was instead the main organizing principle.

According to Nigerian writer Bibi Bakare-Yusuf, while Oyewumi's work rightfully challenges gender stratification as a Western import, her conclusion is based off the faulty reasoning of language determinism. Oyewumi heavily relies on the lack of gendered expressions and the overwhelming presence of age expressions in Yoruba language to prove that these categorizations are respectively familiar and unfamiliar to this society. However, Bakare-Yusuf argues that the threat of mistranslation works both ways. Just as there are less systems of gendering among the Yoruba, there could be less systems of ageing in Western cultures. Oyewumi's work should serve as a naming of culturally specific systems but not as a testimony that these systems cannot be exchanged and translated.

Fellowships and Awards

 * 1998 Distinguished Book Award in the Gender and Sex Section of the American Sociological Association
 * 1998 Finalist for the Herskovitts Prize of the African Studies Association.
 * 2003-4 Rockefeller Humanities Fellow
 * Ford Foundation grant recipient

Books[edit]

 * Gender Epistemologies in Africa: Gendering Traditions, Spaces, Social Institutions and Identities (edited), Palgrave (2011).
 * African Gender Studies Reader (edited), Palgrave: New York (2005).
 * African Women and Feminism: Reflecting on the Politics of Sisterhood (edited), Africa World Press, Trenton: New Jersey (2003).
 * The Invention of Women: Making an African Sense of Western Gender Discourses, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis