Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoroman

Firstly, this contribution offers successive accounts of three ethnographies concerning “young people”, in Burkina Faso (Jacinthe Mozzocchetti, 2008, Être étudiant à Ouagadougou : itinérances, imaginaire et précarité), in Gambia (Paolo Gaibazzi, 2015, Bush Bound: Young Men and Rural Permanence in Mi...

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Main Author: Muriel Champy
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative 2020-01-01
Series:Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/12408
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author Muriel Champy
author_facet Muriel Champy
author_sort Muriel Champy
collection DOAJ
description Firstly, this contribution offers successive accounts of three ethnographies concerning “young people”, in Burkina Faso (Jacinthe Mozzocchetti, 2008, Être étudiant à Ouagadougou : itinérances, imaginaire et précarité), in Gambia (Paolo Gaibazzi, 2015, Bush Bound: Young Men and Rural Permanence in Migrant West Africa) and in the Ivory Coast (Sasha Newell, 2012, The Modernity Bluff: Crime, Consumption and Citizenship in Côte d’Ivoire). Secondly, a comparative parallel is drawn between these three books, with a view to formulating a few hypotheses on the implicit contours of “youth” that are sketched in them. Divided into recurring themes like political mobilisation, waiting and mobility, it shows that, far from only being a question of age, youth presents itself as an implicitly male category, which is designated as such only when it acquires a certain sociopolitical visibility and oppositional firepower.Finally, based on the author’s research among young people living on the streets in Burkina Faso (bakoroman), this article concludes by observing the “young” category’s recent intrusion into Burkina Faso’s political scene, to the point that a re-transcription of vernacular language seems to be asserting itself in the “zenna” written form.
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publisher Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative
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spelling doaj-art-706a23f11b974238b61fad9a4de936272025-01-30T13:42:10ZfraLaboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie ComparativeAteliers d'Anthropologie2117-38692020-01-014710.4000/ateliers.12408Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoromanMuriel ChampyFirstly, this contribution offers successive accounts of three ethnographies concerning “young people”, in Burkina Faso (Jacinthe Mozzocchetti, 2008, Être étudiant à Ouagadougou : itinérances, imaginaire et précarité), in Gambia (Paolo Gaibazzi, 2015, Bush Bound: Young Men and Rural Permanence in Migrant West Africa) and in the Ivory Coast (Sasha Newell, 2012, The Modernity Bluff: Crime, Consumption and Citizenship in Côte d’Ivoire). Secondly, a comparative parallel is drawn between these three books, with a view to formulating a few hypotheses on the implicit contours of “youth” that are sketched in them. Divided into recurring themes like political mobilisation, waiting and mobility, it shows that, far from only being a question of age, youth presents itself as an implicitly male category, which is designated as such only when it acquires a certain sociopolitical visibility and oppositional firepower.Finally, based on the author’s research among young people living on the streets in Burkina Faso (bakoroman), this article concludes by observing the “young” category’s recent intrusion into Burkina Faso’s political scene, to the point that a re-transcription of vernacular language seems to be asserting itself in the “zenna” written form.https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/12408youthAfricagendercategoriescomparative studiespolitical mobilisation
spellingShingle Muriel Champy
Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoroman
Ateliers d'Anthropologie
youth
Africa
gender
categories
comparative studies
political mobilisation
title Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoroman
title_full Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoroman
title_fullStr Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoroman
title_full_unstemmed Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoroman
title_short Étudiants, sitters, nouchi et bakoroman
title_sort etudiants sitters nouchi et bakoroman
topic youth
Africa
gender
categories
comparative studies
political mobilisation
url https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/12408
work_keys_str_mv AT murielchampy etudiantssittersnouchietbakoroman