The Senegalese society is one in which early Islamization has profoundly shaped the mentality of people. The role of women—essential in the traditional society—has also been altered in the process. This paper describes an assessment of the status of Senegalese women in contemporary Senegal as perceived by adolescents, who are equally at a cultural-cross roads of non-islamic traditions, early and intensive islamization, and Western education. Despite a timid rejection of women's inferiority (mostly by women) Islam remains a man's religion.
References
1.
Bazin-TardieuD.Femmes de Mali. Ottawa: Leméac, 1975.
2.
De LandsherreG.Introduction à la recherche en éducation. Liège: G. Thone, 1976.
3.
DesalmandP.L'émancipation de la femme en Afrique et dans le monde. Dakar: Nouvelles Editions Africaines, 1977.
4.
D'HondtW.VandewieleM.Meaning and importance of the practice of religion in Senegal. Journal of Adolescence, 1983, 6, 189–196.
5.
DiarraF.Femmes africaines en devenir. Paris: Anthropos, 1979.
6.
LittleK.African women in towns. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1974.
7.
VandewieleM.D'HondtW.De HemptinneJ.Image of self and image of others among secondary school students in Dakar. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1980, 51, 1227–1238.
8.
X. Le femme africaine et malgache, éléments bibliographiques. Paris: Ministère de la coopération française, 1979.