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"The wife is the mother of the husband" : Marriage, Crisis, and (Re)Generation in Botswana's Pandemic Times

DOI zum Zitieren der Version auf EPub Bayreuth: https://doi.org/10.15495/EPub_UBT_00009193
URN to cite this document: urn:nbn:de:bvb:703-epub-9193-1

Title data

Reece, Koreen:
"The wife is the mother of the husband" : Marriage, Crisis, and (Re)Generation in Botswana's Pandemic Times.
In: Comparative Studies in Society and History. Vol. 67 (2025) Issue 3 . - pp. 524-546.
ISSN 1475-2999
DOI der Verlagsversion: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0010417525000040

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Abstract

Forty years into Botswana’s AIDS epidemic, amidst persistently low rates of marriage across southern Africa, an unexpected uptick in weddings appears to be afoot. Young people orphaned in the worst years of the epidemic are crafting creative paths to marriage where—and perhaps because—their parents could not. Taking the lead of a pastor’s assertion that the wife is mother of her husband, I suggest these conjugal creativities turn on an understanding of marriage as an intergenerational relationship. Casting marriage in intergenerational terms is an act of ethical (re)imagination that creates experimental possibilities for reworking personhood, pasts, and futures in ways that respond closely to the specific crises and loss the AIDS epidemic brought to Botswana. This experimentation is highly unpredictable and may reproduce the crisis and loss to which it responds; the multivalences of marriage-as-motherhood can be sources of failure and violence, as well as innovation and life. But it also recuperates and reorients intergenerational relationships, retrospectively and prospectively, regenerating persons and relations, in time. While different crises might invite different sorts of ethical re-imagination, marriage gives us a novel perspective on how people live with, and through, times of crisis. And marriage emerges as a crucial if often overlooked practice by which social change is not only managed but sought and produced.

Further data

Item Type: Article in a journal
Keywords: regeneration; marriage; kinship; generations; crisis; HIV and AIDS; pandemics; Botswana; ethics; personhood; social change
DDC Subjects: 300 Social sciences
Institutions of the University: Faculties > Faculty of Cultural Studies > Chair Social Anthropology
Profile Fields > Advanced Fields > African Studies
Faculties
Faculties > Faculty of Cultural Studies
Profile Fields
Profile Fields > Advanced Fields
Language: English
Originates at UBT: Yes
URN: urn:nbn:de:bvb:703-epub-9193-1
Date Deposited: 12 May 2026 11:46
Last Modified: 12 May 2026 11:47
URI: https://epub.uni-bayreuth.de/id/eprint/9193

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