PhD defence Loes Oudenhuijsen
On Wednesday 5 March at 16:00 CET, Loes Oudenhuijsen will defend her dissertation Situating “wicked” women: Gender panic and savoir vivre in urban Senegal.
This thesis analyses women’s gender and sexual dissidence in relation to social transformations in Senegal. Through a focus on the everyday lives of three groups of women who transgress Senegalese gender norms – féministes (F: feminists), lesbiennes (F: lesbians) and ñi génn guddi (W: those who go out at night, that is who engage in commercial sex) – this thesis explores how women shape their lives while navigating public debates, gender panic, and the policing of gender norms that results from gender panic in Senegal. In a context of virulent anti-queer public debates, most women avoid the public sphere and find spaces to craft dissident lives for themselves through the use of trickery, secrecy and ambiguity. This craftiness is learned and developed in conjunction with others, and women’s kinship bonds appear as a particularly important site of collective knowledge production (savoir vivre). This thesis concludes that while these kinship bonds and social relations between women are not free from conflict, they nevertheless remain central for women to survive together under socially and economically adverse conditions.
Watch the livestream here.
Speaker
Loes Oudenhuijsen is a PhD candidate at the African Studies Centre Leiden. She holds a BSc in International Development Studies from Wageningen University, and an MA in African Studies (research) from Leiden University. At the ASCL she works on her own PhD-project about transformations and continuations in gender norms in Senegal, through a focus on the positioning of sexually dissident women in society. At the ASCL, she is furthermore involved in teaching in the (Res)MA African Studies. Loes is also an editorial board member of Lova, the Dutch association for feminist anthropology and gender studies. Additionally, she is a member of its working group Safety in the Field, which seeks to explore and discuss how ethnographic fieldwork can be taught and practiced in safer, inclusive and ethical ways. Loes has also been involved in the Voice4Thought foundation, and has published with Prof. Dr Mirjam de Bruijn on women in slam poetry.
Loes was temporarily also a Communications Officer at the African Studies Centre Leiden.