In a 1984 book, Claire C.Robertson argued that, before colonialism, age was a more important indicator of status and authority than gender in Ghana and in Africa generally. British colonialism imposed European-style male-dominant notions upon more egalitarian local situations to the detriment of women generally, and gender became a defining characteristic that weakened women's power and authority.

Subsequent research in Kenya convinced Robertson that she had overgeneralized about Africa. Before colonialism, gender was more salient in central Kenya than it was in Ghana, although age was still crucial in determining authority. In contrast with Ghana, where women had traded for hundreds of years and achieved legal majority (not unrelated phenomena), the evidence regarding central Kenya indicated that women were legal minors and were sometimes treated as male property, as were European women at that time. Factors like strong patrilinearity and patrilocality, as well as women's inferior land rights and lesser involvement in trade, made women more dependent on men than was generally the case in Ghana. However, since age apparently remained the overriding principle of social organization in central Kenya, some senior women had much authority. Thus, Robertson revised her hypothesis somewhat, arguing that in determining authority in precolonial Africa age was a primary principle that superseded gender to varying degrees depending on the situation.


The author of the passage mentions the status of age as a principle of social organization in precolonial central Kenya in highlight text most likely in order to


indicate that women's dependence on men in precolonial Kenya was not absolute

contrast the situation of senior women to that of less senior women in precolonial Kenyan society

differentiate between the status and authority of precolonial Kenyan women and that of precolonial Ghanaian women

explain why age superseded gender to a greater extent in precolonial Kenya than it did elsewhere in Africa

identify a factor that led Robertson to revise her hypothesis about precolonial Africa

考题讲解

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正确答案是 A。这道题的答案选 A 是因为,文章提到,在殖民主义之前,中部肯尼亚的女性并非完全依赖男性,年长的女性拥有更多的权力。因此,所提及的年龄在当时的社会组织中起着重要作用,从而说明女性对男性的依赖并不完全一致。

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