Matriliny and Modernity

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Author_Maila Stivens
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Clan Chief
Colonial Administration
Conferred
Elementary Family
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FELDA
FELDA Scheme
feminist anthropology
Free Choice Marriage
Gender politics
gender relations Malaysia
Gender roles
gendered social change Malaysia
Janda
kinship studies
Matrilineal society
Negeri Sembilan
postcolonial gender analysis
Remittance Economy
Rice Land
Roosted
Rubber Land
Rubber Production
Ruling United Malays National Organisation
rural Southeast Asia societies
Sexual politics
Study Villages
Sungei Ujong
UMNO
Village Economy
Women and society
Women's Land Rights
Women's Situation
Women’s Land Rights
Women’s Situation
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032600253
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Jun 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Matriliny and Modernity (1996) explores the situation both past and present of women living in the matrilineal society of Negeri Sembilan in a rapidly modernising Malaysia. Written from a feminist anthropological viewpoint, it considers how far both the colonial and post-colonial remakings of matrilineal cultural practices within modernity have left women with what many western feminists would call a degree of social agency if not autonomy. Maila Stivens looks critically at the appropriateness of such judgements, at the same time reflecting on the ways that western knowledge production and the continuing importance of images of exotic matriarchies in the western imagination have shaped debates about such societies. As well as appealing to those with an interest in issues of gender-and-development, Asian Studies and women’s situation in modernising societies, the book’s explanation of the past and present of relatively more egalitarian gender arrangements also contributes to wider debates about causes of sexual inequality and the possibilities for gender equality.

Maila Stivens is Principal Research Fellow at the Asia Institute, University of Melbourne. Previously Director of Gender Studies at Melbourne, she studied anthropology at the London School of Economics, and has also taught at University College, London, and the National University of Singapore (NUS), as well as holding fellowships at NUS and the Institute of Development Studies, Sussex. She has published widely on her research which has included studies of middle-class kinship in Sydney; 'matriliny’, gender relations and modernity, and work and family in Malaysia; childhood in Southeast Asia; ‘family values’; and, latterly, asylum seeker issues in Australia.

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