Publications

PUBLICATIONS

My publications have broadly focused on the decolonization of knowledge about urban Africa(ns) and the critique of neoliberal entrepreneurial respectability politics that projects a new afronormativity that ostracizes those who continue to exist on the margins of society.

Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G. A. (2023). New orientations. Incoherence. Dialogues in Human Geography, 0(0).

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12732

ABSTRACT

In this commentary, I engage with Simone et al.’s article, ‘Inhabiting the Extensions’, by reflecting on its connections to my work on uncertainty and urban change in Ibadan and Lagos, Nigeria, and to my recent turn to queer theory to better understand the urban. In doing so, I highlight how youth think a new orientation towards a luxurious lifestyle is their answer to instability and consider the importance of embracing incoherence as a way of having a more nuanced understanding of everyday life and challenging teleological timeframes.

Koleth, E., Peake, L., Razavi, N. & Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G. (2023) Decolonizing feminist explorations of urban futures. Urban Geography, 44(9), 1843-1852

DOI: 10.1080/02723638.2023.2257473

ABSTRACT

How do decolonial feminist urban imaginaries of urban futures begin to interrogate twenty-first century urban life? The urban futures signaled in this special issue highlight three dimensions of urban imaginaries. The first connects the privatization and commodification of urban infrastructures to state-based and capitalist discursive efforts to make the urban. The second concerns temporal convergences of past, present and future in visions of the urban that reproduce the recursive logics of coloniality by re-mapping the landscapes of urban inequality and dispossession through encounters with sedimentations of colonial and neocolonial formations. Third, authors take up the everyday as a site of struggle through which women’s negotiations and placemaking practices offer alternative urban imaginaries. These articles are based on papers given at the 2019 “Feminist Explorations of Urban Futures” conference organized by the transnational feminist research project, “Urbanization and Gender in the Global South: A Transformative Knowledge Network” (GenUrb).

Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G. (2023). Estranged. City. Stranger(s). In Bishop, R. & Simone, A. (Eds.) Following the Fish (pp. 117-122). Special Issue. Biennale Architettura 2023. 

Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G. A. (2022). Grappling with the fragmentations: Black feminisms, African feminisms and  the possibilities of Black geographies in Canada. Topia 44, 175-184. 

Razavi, N.S., Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G., Basu, S. Datta, A., de Souza, K., Ip, P.T.T., Marcus, J., Miraftab, F.,  Mullings, B., Nmormah, S., Odunola, B. Pardo Burgoa, S. & Peake, L. (2022). Everyday urbanism in the pandemic city: A feminist comparative study of the gendered experiences of Covid-19 in southern cities.  Social & Cultural Geography

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14649365.2022.2104355

ABSTRACT

Drawing on GenUrb’s comparative research undertaken in mid-2020 with communities in five cities—Cochabamba, Bolivia, Delhi, India, Georgetown, Guyana, Ibadan, Nigeria, and Shanghai, China—we engage in an intersectional analysis of the gendered impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic in women’s everyday lives. Our research employs a variety of context-specific methods, including virtual methods, phone interviews, and socially-distanced interviews to engage women living in neighbourhoods characterized by underdevelopment and economic insecurity. While existing conditions of precarity trouble the before-and-after terminology of Covid-19, across the five cities the narratives of women’s everyday lives reveal shifts in spatial-temporal orders that have deepened gendered and racial exclusions. We find that limited mobilities and the different and changing dimensions of production and social reproduction have led to increased care work, violence, and strained mental health. Finally, we also find that social reproduction solidarities, constituting old and new circuits of care, have been reinforced during the pandemic.

Rankin, K., Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. & Ninglehku, S. (2022).  The right to the city: “The slum” and informal  urbanisms. In A. Bain & L. Peake (Eds.), Urbanization in a global context (pp. 63-79). Oxford University Press. 

Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G., & Peake, L. (2021). Understanding the importance of a gendered analysis of covid- 19. In G. J. Andrews, V. A. Crooks, J. R. Pearce, & J. P. Messina (Eds.), COVID-19 and similar futures: Pandemic geographies (pp. 341–347). Springer International Publishing.

Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G., & Peake, L. (2021). Tiwa’s morning. In M. Lancione & C. McFarlane (Eds.), Global  urbanism: Knowledge, power and the city (pp. 116–123). Routledge. 

Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G., Bailey, M., Flynn, K., Judd, B., Weekley, A. K., Musial, J., & White, M. A. (2020).  Black feminist thought and the gender, women’s, and feminist studies PhD: A roundtable discussion. Feminist Formations, 32(2), 1–28.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/ff.2020.0023

ABSTRACT

Based on a roundtable discussion convened at the 2017 National Women’s Studies Association (NWSA) annual conference, “Forty Years After Combahee,” this discussion addresses the fraught relationship between Black feminist thought and doctoral training in gender, women’s, and feminist studies (GWFS). While intersectionality is nearly ubiquitously claimed as central to training in GWFS PhD programs, its institutionalization can serve to defang and dehistoricize the centrality of Black feminisms and womanisms, as well as marginalize, exclude, and/or fetishize Black feminists training and teaching in such programs. Participants critically examine the ongoing realities of a white-centric canon, the disingenuous and racialized division of academia and community activism, struggles for Black-affirming spaces, anti-Black peer microaggressions, white fragility, and lack of mentorship, isolation, and “pushout.” The authors reflect on their experiences transitioning from historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) and non-HBCU undergraduate programs to GWFS PhD programs and post-PhD faculty life; the importance of mentorship and community-building; Black intellectual and embodied navigations of institutional structures under white supremacy; racialized affective labor; and the place of GWFS PhD training in the futures of Black feminist thought and field (re)formation. The resulting written collaboration serves as part wake-up call, part warning, and part “truth telling” about the realities of being a Black woman intellectual navigating GWFS PhD training and post-PhD faculty life.

Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. A. (2019). ‘The city of our dream’: Owambe urbanism and low‐income women’s resistance in Ibadan, Nigeria. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 43(3), 423–441.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2427.12732

ABSTRACT

Ibadan, Nigeria, has been an outlier in the ranking of world-class cities. But in the past seven years, amidst the circulating Africa Rising narrative, Ibadan has embarked on what I call an Afropolitan Imagineering project of owambe urbanism. Afropolitan Imagineering refers to the production of new images/narratives of Africa and Africans as world-class and cosmopolitan. Owambe urbanism is a spatio-temporal neoliberal project concerning destination, arrival and place-making, which promises a shared and happy future for all urban dwellers. I argue that this promise of happiness is challenged by low-income women who are cognizant that a shared and happy future is impossible when little effort is made to address social inequality in the present. They thus refuse to be ‘good’ citizens and invoke an alternative urban futurity through their embodied and imagined resistance.

Adeniyi-Ogunyankin, G. (2019). ‘Spare tires’, ‘second fiddle’ and ‘prostitutes’? Interrogating discourses about women and politics in Nigeria (Reprint). In B. Rutherford & P. Adesanmi (Eds.), Africa matters: Cultural politics, political economies and grammars of protest (pp. 45-74). Daraja Press. 

Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2019). In/out of Nigeria: Transnational research and the politics of identity and 
knowledge production. Gender, Place & Culture, 26 (10), 1386–1401

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2018.1481370

ABSTRACT

This article explores the murkiness of fieldwork and writing that often comes with simultaneous positioning as insider/outsider. I engage with two key themes: First, identity, legitimacy and representation and, second, the gray spaces between theory and reality. The first theme examines the contradictions of being perceived as both an insider and outsider; the complexities of identity and language while at ‘home’ in the field, and the challenges of performing the native informant role while back ‘home’ in Canada. The second theme explores the uncomfortable dilemma of engaging with the ‘Rush to Theory’ from the global south. I will examine how the theories are sophisticated and provocative, yet prove unsatisfactory in terms of having practical applications. I conclude the article by positing that, despite the challenges of doing transnational work, transnational subjects invariably contribute to the creation of a new politics of knowledge production and to the attainment of social justice.


Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2019). Mothering, urbanization and Africa. In L. O’Brien Hallestein, A. O’Reilly,  & M. Vandenbeld Giles (Eds.), The Routledge companion to motherhood (pp. 414-425). Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge.

ABSTRACT

This chapter examines how the relationship between mothering and urbanization in Africa has been understood by Africanist scholars. The predominant theme points to mother’s economic challenges in increasingly neoliberalizing cities. The contemporary struggles of mothers have been linked to colonial legacies such as their exclusions under the colonial urban economy and the colonial legal framework that treated women as property – thus limiting their economic opportunities. These colonial legacies have been further exacerbated under neoliberal economic reforms that have increased their financial responsibilities in the maintenance of their families. Despite their marginalization, mothers are engaged in activism to assert their rights to the city and demand a more livable life. The central issues that have been highlighted by scholars pertain to skills acquisition training and urban displacement, as they respectively relate to the quest to empower mothers and make them more economically autonomous, and to government efforts to hide poverty and make urban space more viable for regional and global capital. This chapter also highlights that emerging scholarship on mothering and urbanization in Africa point to the premature conclusions on falling poverty among female-headed households and the need to diversify research on urban motherhood beyond the poverty lens.


Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2019). Postcolonial approaches to the study of African politics. Oxford research encyclopedia of politics. New York: Oxford University Press.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.830

ABSTRACT

Postcolonial theory has been embraced and critiqued by various scholars since the 1980s. Central to the field of postcolonial studies is the examination of colonial episteme and discourse, European racism, and imperial dominance. Broadly, postcolonialism analyzes the effects, and enduring legacies, of colonialism and disavows Eurocentric master-narratives. Postcolonial ideas have been significant to several academic disciplines, largely those in the humanities and social sciences, such as cultural and literary studies, anthropology, political science, history, development studies, geography, urban studies, and gender and sexuality studies. The key scholars that are connected to postcolonial theory, Edward Said, Homi Bhabha, and Gayatri Spivak, have been critiqued for grounding their work in the Western theories of postmodernism and poststructuralism. Given the predominant association of these three scholars to postcolonial theory, Africanists have argued that postcolonial theory is dismissive of African theorizing. Moreover, some scholars have noted that Africanists have hesitated to use postcolonial theory because it is too discursive and has limited applicability to material reality. As such, the relevancy of postcolonial theory to Africa has been a repetitive question for decades. Despite this line of questioning, some scholars have posited that there are African thinkers and activists who are intellectual antecedents to the postcolonial thought that emerged in the 1980s and 1990s. Additionally, other Africanist scholars have engaged with the colonial discursive construction of African subjectivities and societies as inferior. These engagements have been particularly salient in women and gender studies, urban studies and studies of identity and global belonging.


Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2018). A “scented declaration of progress”: Globalization, Afropolitan imagineering, and familiar orientations. Antipode, 50(5), 1145–1165.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12392

ABSTRACT

Branded as “Africa’s first luxury perfume”, the Scent of Africa perfume is a “scented declaration of progress”. Particularly fascinating is the commercial advertisement for the perfume, which I argue to be an “Afropolitan Imagineering” project that is intended to signal Africa’s rise and its new association with global cosmopolitanism. At first glance, the Scent of Africa perfume advertisement seems to point to the ways in which Imagineering projects can reproduce colonial discourses about Africanness. However, in this article, I suggest that we complicate the advertisement and examine its subversive potential to decentre whiteness and celebrate Africanness while writing Africa into the world. Despite this subversion, I conclude that African worlding practices should disinherit the familiarity of Eurocentric geographic determinism that is embedded in Afropolitan Imagineering and instead become informed by afro-futuristic imaginings and disidentification politics.

Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2018). Dislocation, mimicry and the geography of belonging in Sefi Atta’s A bit of Difference. In D. Fongang (Ed.), The postcolonial subject in transit: Migration, borders and subjectivity in African diaspora literature (pp. 139-153). Lexington Books.

ABSTRACT

Sefi Atta’s A bit of difference (2013) explores issues of belonging, identity, racism, culture, gender, and sexuality that affect the main character Deola, and her friends Subu and Bandele.  Deola, Subu and Bandele’s various experiences of inclusion and exclusion in Lagos and London lead them to have different understandings of home. For Deola, ‘home’ is the place of origin and her discontentment with the ways in which she can be both hypervisible and invisible in the predominantly white spaces of London convinces her to return ‘home’ to Nigeria. I use the concepts of homely and unhomely to explore the ways in which Deola loses and finds herself in both the familiar and unfamiliar spaces of London and Lagos. I also examine the notion of home as destination through Bandele’s desires to disavow the heteronormative understanding of Nigeria as a homeland and search for a ‘home’ where he will not be “othered”. Through Subu, I argue that London is a home away from ‘home’ because her nostalgia for ‘home’ enables her to engage in home-making practices in London that re-perform ‘home’. 


Bawa, S., & Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2018). (Un)African women: Identity, class and moral geographies in postcolonial times. African Identities, 16(4), 444–459.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14725843.2018.1474340

ABSTRACT

The concrete and abstract geographies of difference on the African continent not only arise from environmental, socio-cultural and religious factors but also from the historical and differential impacts and experiences of colonization and its legacies. In this paper, we use the web series, An African City, as a reference point, to examine the troubling nature of binary depictions of a colonial/traditional Africa and a new/modern/global Africa. Relying on Postcolonial feminist methodologies of critique and deconstruction, we propose that in countering such simplistic narratives, Africa ought to be seen as constructed, abstract, material, plural and confusing in order to account for its complexities. In particular, we focus on the centrality of women to African identity discourses. We argue that while Afropolitan and Africa rising discourses simultaneously challenge and interrupt problematic colonial constructions of Africa as backward and in need of salvation, they also (perhaps more problematically) still re-centre the West as the progenitor of progress, thereby reiterating the colonial tale.

Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2016).“These girls’ fashion is sick”: An African city and the geography of sartorial worldliness. Feminist Africa 21, 37-51.

ABSTRACT

This paper argues that the embodiment of fashion in the web series, An African City, is a geographical site for challenging dominant Eurocentric narratives about African women as insignificant to the global spaces of fashion.  By situating embodied fashion as a site of analysis, the paper posits that the sartorial elegance in An African city is part of the “Africa Rising” rhetoric and serves to announce Africa’s cosmopolitan worldliness while simultaneously linking this progress to the bodies of upper-middle class “Afropolitan” women. Thus, the paper claims that while the use of fashion as a counter narrative offers a critical intervention in the web series, it  concomitantly contributes to the production of negative discourses about poor and non-“Afropolitan” women as unfashionable.

Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2014). Dancing without drums: Using maternalism as a political strategy to critique  neoliberalism in Ibadan, Nigeria. In M. Vandenbeld Giles (Ed.). Mothering in the age of neoliberalism (pp. 367-380). Toronto: Demeter Press.  

Adeniyi Ogunyankin, G. (2013). “When will I get my rest?”: Neo-liberalism, women, class and ageing in Ibadan,  Nigeria. Agenda, 26 (4), 29-36.