Un grin de jeunesse ?

Based on an ethnographic study in a Malinké village in north-east Guinea, this article considers the question of what constitutes youth in the context of rural West Africa. It examines gatherings of young men for tea, grins, to show how youth is above all relational, and that it develops in specific...

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Main Author: Anna Dessertine
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/12234
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author Anna Dessertine
author_facet Anna Dessertine
author_sort Anna Dessertine
collection DOAJ
description Based on an ethnographic study in a Malinké village in north-east Guinea, this article considers the question of what constitutes youth in the context of rural West Africa. It examines gatherings of young men for tea, grins, to show how youth is above all relational, and that it develops in specific practices according to the interactions of individuals of one same age set (kari) with individuals of a different generation, in the village or while migrating, particularly in the region’s artisanal gold mines. It begins with an analysis of the status games that take place in grins, games in which every day, these men replay the statuses of firstborn and cadet (a child who is not firstborn), in interactions between individuals who consider themselves peers. Secondly, this article will examine the relations occasioned by these gatherings: on the one hand, with those who do not take part in them, given that these meetings take place in view of everyone in the central courtyards of residences, and on the other hand, in a context of intensification of local mobilities in the region’s artisanal gold mines.
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institution Kabale University
issn 2117-3869
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publisher Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative
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spelling doaj-art-b18d7e05ee614765a1d9baf6b751c59b2025-01-30T13:42:10ZfraLaboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie ComparativeAteliers d'Anthropologie2117-38692020-01-014710.4000/ateliers.12234Un grin de jeunesse ?Anna DessertineBased on an ethnographic study in a Malinké village in north-east Guinea, this article considers the question of what constitutes youth in the context of rural West Africa. It examines gatherings of young men for tea, grins, to show how youth is above all relational, and that it develops in specific practices according to the interactions of individuals of one same age set (kari) with individuals of a different generation, in the village or while migrating, particularly in the region’s artisanal gold mines. It begins with an analysis of the status games that take place in grins, games in which every day, these men replay the statuses of firstborn and cadet (a child who is not firstborn), in interactions between individuals who consider themselves peers. Secondly, this article will examine the relations occasioned by these gatherings: on the one hand, with those who do not take part in them, given that these meetings take place in view of everyone in the central courtyards of residences, and on the other hand, in a context of intensification of local mobilities in the region’s artisanal gold mines.https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/12234youthprimogenitureGuineagamesgathering
spellingShingle Anna Dessertine
Un grin de jeunesse ?
Ateliers d'Anthropologie
youth
primogeniture
Guinea
games
gathering
title Un grin de jeunesse ?
title_full Un grin de jeunesse ?
title_fullStr Un grin de jeunesse ?
title_full_unstemmed Un grin de jeunesse ?
title_short Un grin de jeunesse ?
title_sort un grin de jeunesse
topic youth
primogeniture
Guinea
games
gathering
url https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/12234
work_keys_str_mv AT annadessertine ungrindejeunesse