by Brooke Schwartz Bocast (Author)
Winner of the Outstanding Book Award (Council on Anthropology and Education), the Rosalyn Terborg-Penn Book Prize (Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora), and the Outstanding Book Award - Honorable Mention (Society of Professors of Education). If Books Fail, Try Beauty: An Ethnography of Educated Womanhood in the New East Africa examines Kampala's university-based sexual economy wherein female students exchange sexual favors for money, grades, and luxury commodities. These practices increase young women's risk for infectious disease, pregnancy, and moral rebuke, yet many women engaged in "transactional" sex are adept students at Makerere University and members of East Africa's nascent middle class. Based on thirty-six months of ethnographic research, If Books Fail reveals that students participate in Makerere's sexual economy to pursue social advancement in a newly privatized education sector.
The book charts the passage and effects of Uganda's education restructuring from 2004 onwards and demonstrates how these reforms - in opposition to the government's gender equality aims - undermine female students' opportunities for success by reshaping the meaning of "educated woman."
If Books Fail brings together formerly disparate conversations about education, sexuality, and state policy to offer a theorization of emerging forms of selfhood in the post colony.
Author Biography
Brooke Schwartz Bocast is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Montana State University.
Her work has been published in City & Society, PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, Anthropology and Humanism, and The Routledge Companion to Media Anthropology. She writes about East African culture and politics at the Council on Foreign Relations' Africa in Transition blog.
Number of Pages: 232
Dimensions: 0.33 x 8.27 x 5.54 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: June 20, 2023