Abstract

Marriage among African teenagers is currently a central focus of campaigns by UN agencies and international NGOs. Yet marriage has received only limited attention from geographers and has largely escaped the attention of geographers of youth. In this paper we explore the relational geographies of age that underlie young people's motivations for, and experiences of, marriage in two rural African settings with differing marriage practices: matrilocal southern Malawi and patrilocal Lesotho. We draw on participatory research activities and life history interviews conducted with 80 people aged between 10 and 24 years old. While the young people's attitudes and experiences were varied and complex, starkly different accounts emerged from the two settings. In particular, young women in Lesotho offered very negative assessments of marriage, while those in Malawi were very much more positive. Through these examples, we highlight how young people's marriage choices and experiences are relationally produced. Decisions about whether, when and whom to marry reflect socially entrenched expectations concerning generational allocations of resources, labour and responsibilities, which intersect with contemporary social and economic processes including poverty, unemployment, land scarcity and AIDS. Experiences of marriage, too, are produced through practices that are spatially structured and contextually situated in relation to socio‐economic conditions. Thus marriage, as a “vital conjuncture” in young people's lives, plays a key role in the relational construction of individual lifecourses and in (re)constructing relationships of age, gender and, especially, generation.

Highlights

  • KEYWORDS generation, lifecourse, marriage, relationality, southern Africa, vital conjunctureIn rural southern Africa marriage is very significant for young people

  • After describing the research methods, we examine the varied motivations for marriage expressed by young people and their experiences of early married life, considering the ways in which these are shaped by and shape relations of age, gender and generation and their place in the lifecourse

  • A focus on marriage reveals the significance of spatiality in the construction of relations of age and generation and of the lifecourse

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

KEYWORDS generation, lifecourse, marriage, relationality, southern Africa, vital conjuncture. It ties the histories and prospects of one individual to another (and their family) and shapes and constrains their life chances It is young people who confer on it a deep significance, but increasingly global institutions, in relation to “child marriage” (see Girls Not Brides, 2016; UNICEF, 2014). We explore how marriage takes place within, and cements, social relations that are structured by power-laden discourses of age, gender and especially generation These relations render marriage an appropriate or unavoidable course of action for some young people at particular junctures in their lifecourses and shape its consequences for their wellbeing. After describing the research methods, we examine the varied motivations for marriage expressed by young people and their experiences of early married life, considering the ways in which these are shaped by and shape relations of age, gender and generation and their place in the lifecourse. We conclude by considering the implications for relational geographies of age, and for campaigns to eradicate child marriage that are based on universalist notions of marriage that neglect the nuances of cultural, social and economic aspects of marriage decisions

OF MARRIAGE
How has your life changed after getting married?
| CONCLUSIONS
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