Managing elopement on the mobile phone: continuity and change in Woɗaaɓe te’egal marriage

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Abstract

Based on extended fieldwork among Fulɓe Woɗaaɓe in Niger and by analysing an ethnographic case, this paper discusses aspects of continuity and change in the practice of a culture-specific form of elopement marriage, called te’egal, in which a married woman leaves her husband to marry a man from another clan. The discussion focuses on two major aspects: (1) the extensive use of mobile phone communication in arranging and logistically managing elopement, and (2) the increasing police involvement in the settlement of te’egal cases. Mobile phone use in the context of elopement is interpreted as a modern means of achieving cultural ends. It acts as a catalyst, making elopement more dynamic. In the wider context of globalization and urbanity, however, this leads not simply to continuity but also to contradictions, as the moral and legal institutions of the state increasingly interfere with the normative framework of customary law.

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APA

Köhler, F. (2017). Managing elopement on the mobile phone: continuity and change in Woɗaaɓe te’egal marriage. Canadian Journal of African Studies, 51(3), 341–358. https://doi.org/10.1080/00083968.2017.1387061

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