6533b85dfe1ef96bd12be924

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Cultural Politics of Love and Provision among Poor Youth in Urban Tanzania

Laura Stark

subject

ta520Archeologypovertymedia_common.quotation_subjectAgency (philosophy)intimacyAffect (psychology)Tanzania03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Transactional leadershiprakkausläheisyysta616sex0601 history and archaeology030212 general & internal medicineSociologymedia_commonköyhyysSwahili060101 anthropologybiologyPovertyTansaniaCultural politicsGender studies06 humanities and the artsbiology.organism_classificationlanguage.human_languageNegotiationTanzaniaaffectseksiAnthropologymoneyAfricarahalanguageSocial psychologyurbanlove

description

This article examines how urban youth in the poorest neighbourhoods of Dar es Salaam negotiate the terms of transactional intimacy, that is, heterosexual relations in which men are expected to provide for women materially. Using the concept of ‘affect’, I argue that this negotiation involves different levels of male providership, as well as moral values attached to notions of ‘true love’ and the Swahili concept of tamaa. Poor men and women view their agency differently within transactional intimacy, with women describing themselves as exploited by men who do not fulfil their end of the transactional bargain, and poor men portraying themselves as deeply disempowered in comparison to wealthier men. Yet women and men also produce shared cultural discourses to portray men's meagre providership in a positive light, and to place upon women the moral onus of sacrificing material aspirations in order to choose ‘true love’. peerReviewed

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201705032157