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Sex,
money and power: considerations for African women's empowerment
Danai S. Mupotsa, Africa Files
February 12, 2008
http://www.africafiles.org/atissueezine.asp#art1
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Growing up in Zimbabwe,
I was constantly forced to observe the "appropriate modes of
conduct" for a young woman. Maintaining "respectability"
was paramount and young women were policed constantly. The constant
(and consistent) reminders of appropriate parameters for women's
bodies and sexuality, as I experienced it in Harare, drew me to
reflect on the historical underpinnings of what my peers described
to me as "our culture".1 Interrogating this national culture,
it became curiously clear to me that at the crux of these constructs
of "tradition" and "modernity" in these discussions
were women's bodies: the success or failure of the project
of "national culture" (if we are to call it that) appeared
to reside in the "national family's" ability to
manage and control the mobility and sexuality of women's bodies,
be it through parents and kin at home, or through the police forces
on the streets of Harare.2
When I consider the question
of women's economic empowerment in Africa, these contentious
issues immediately come to mind. A range of sexually violent relationships3
— from families accepting bribes to withdraw charges for sexual
assault,4 to young girls (and their families) accepting money and
gifts for relations with older men — are commonplace and commonly
accepted.5 Regarding the latter issue, a social worker in Harare
observed with despair, "How do you say to people, 'Stop
having the relationship,' when they want food on the table!"6
In recent years, in a variation of the "sugar daddy" phenomenon,
Zimbabwe has seen the emergence of the infamous "small house"
- the second (or third, or fourth, etc . . . ) young wife.
Like a BMW, or Mercedes Benz car, it's a status symbol for
every successful man! A cynical perspective, perhaps, but what is
interesting is how women, women's bodies and sexuality have
become increasingly commodified in the context of extreme economic
inequality. In a country with an economy in crisis, women appear
to be hardest hit by poverty, and transactional sex (by choice and
otherwise) has emerged as one means of survival.
All this begs the question,
if women were economically empowered, would they be in a better
position to negotiate sexual relationships?
What I want to do here
is, first, to state my central thesis. Then I will use a personal
anecdote to illustrate the complexities of the issues at stake.
In conclusion, I will return to the question of women's economic
empowerment by examining the close relationship between discourses
on sexuality, culture and women's economic empowerment.
Dominant views on women's
empowerment suggest that offering women economic independence and
empowerment can enhance the cause of gender equality and women's
sexual rights. I wish to extend this argument by suggesting that
because of the manner that dominant discourses on culture have been
socially engineered (in this case, in Harare), women cannot achieve
economic empowerment if we take no account of the ways in which
different gender and sexual relations operate. Whatever the economic
conditions in different countries, women the world over continue
to face the violation of our sexual rights because of a historically
produced and artificially maintained gender discourse of "our
culture" or "our tradition" — that not only
entitles men to women's bodies, but also informs our views
on economic activity. What I wish to interrogate are the multiple
representations and interpretations of tradition and modernity as
they are applied in relation to women under the present economic
crisis in Zimbabwe. Taking one specific example, I want to consider
how young women rationalize their choices (or lack thereof) and
agency in these situations and how families use "culture"
and "tradition" to defend or define what appears to be
a fairly modern phenomenon. I also wish to consider the multiple
legal frameworks under which these relationships occur. How does
one protect the rights of young girls when there are laws defending
them as minors that consider these acts to be statutory rape while
another set of laws that have been defined as "traditional"
can also be applied to counter such charges of rape? Given the implications
of the constraint on women's mobility and bodies, what are
the economic possibilities for young women?
I have elected to focus
on sexuality, as this is a topic on which African feminists have
often been silent. Patricia McFadden speaks to this, describing
the fear of sexuality amongst us African women as "socio-sexual
anxiety". She says that "the intensity of this anxiety
is generated by the fact that there is an extremely intimate relationship
between sexuality and power, a connection which is manifested in
a range of circumstances and experiences."7Like McFadden,
I am concerned that this socialization has depoliticized our discussions
of sexuality when they do occur and most often such discussions
do not even take place. Barbara Klugman endorses McFadden's
position in an essay interrogating the discourses that took place
in Beijing on sexuality in Southern Africa,8 noting how previous
silences on sexuality are being challenged by the advent of the
HIV/AIDS pandemic. While discussions on sexuality in Africa have
emerged in recent years, in large part because of the HIV/AIDS pandemic,
these discourses continue to fail to address the intersections of
power, sexuality and culture. Some have noted that in fact what
is produced is the notion of "African sexuality" as deviant
and the producer of an "African AIDS".9 I want move away
from HIV/AIDS, not because I do not see the importance of these
debates, but because like many others I see the prevalence of the
pandemic in Africa as symptomatic of a pre-existing gender discourse
of power: it is precisely this discourse that I wish to investigate.
The decision to focus
on young women is another methodological choice because young women
are rendered particularly vulnerable in Zimbabwe. Recent statistics
with regard to HIV/AIDS bear this out. In sub-Saharan Africa young
women have substantially higher rates of HIV infection compared
to young men of the same age. In Zimbabwe specifically, it is estimated
that 26% of females aged 15-24 years are infected with HIV, compared
to10% of males in the same age range.10 Such statistics reflect
the particular vulnerabilities faced by young women. Richard Mabala,
who coined the term "Genderation", argues that "If
women are a disempowered majority and young people an invisible
majority, girls and young women stand at the interface of gender
and generation. They have far less power and resources than older
women and are even more invisible than adolescent boys and young
men."11 Like Mabala, I contend that there is a need to focus
on the lives of young women. As a young woman myself, I am able
to reflect upon my own daily experiences.
I will enter
this discussion with a personal anecdote to demonstrate the complexities
I have outlined above. In conclusion, I will return to the question
of economic empowerment by examining the close relationship between
discourses on sexuality, culture and women's economic empowerment.
References:
1. I draw this conclusion
both from general observation, and a series of interviews I conducted
in 2005 with a group of 12 women aged between 19 and 22, who grew
up in Harare. The study focused on questions of sexuality and articulating
the reasons for their decisions and perceptions of appropriate feminine
and masculine behaviour as predicated on what they called "our
culture". It is from these reflections that I began to think
about the discourses of "our culture" as they have been
produced in Zimbabwe.
2. For example a study
on the status of women in Zimbabwe published in 1998 notes that
"in the early years of independence women's human rights
were constantly violated when they were picked up off the streets
on the excuse that police were clearing the streets of prostitutes."
(Tichagwa, W. 1998. Beyond Inequalities: Women in Zimbabwe. Harare:
ZWRCN. Page 38.)
3. I say "sexual
violence", but what I hope becomes clear is the expanse of
this spectrum: I am speaking here of a variety of experiences and
the negotiations of agency that are involved in them. I call it
sexual violence to underline the question of power related to them.
4. For example, on a
list of the 1000 Worst Cases of Rape in 2005, compiled by Girl Child
Network (www.gcn.co.zw) from more than 6000 reported cases, there
are a number of cases where either the victim of rape or her parents/family
have accepted money to prevent them from reporting the case to the
police.
5. See Modola, S. 2007.
"Daughters Fetch High Prices As Brides," in Agenda. No.
73: Biopolitics: New Technologies Trilogy, vol. 1, 1. Page 130.
This brief article reveals how many families have elected to marry
off their young daughters to pay off debts, for example.
6. Chase, M. 2004. "African
Girls Taught to Say No to 'Sugar Daddies'". The
Wall Street Journal. February 25, 2004. Page 2.
7. McFadden, P. 2003.
"Sexual Pleasure as Feminist Choice," in Feminist Africa
2. Cape Town: African Gender Institute. Page 50.
8. Klugman, B. 2000.
"Sexual Rights in Southern Africa: A Beijing Discourse or a
Strategic Necessity?" Health and Human Rights, vol. 4, no.
2, Reproductive and Sexual Rights. Pages 144-173.
9. See Jungar, Katarina
& Onias, Elina. 2004. "Preventing HIV? Medical Discourses
and Invisible Women," pp.97-111, in Inge Arnfred, ed. 2004.
Re-Thinking Sexualities in Africa. The Nordic Africa Institute and
Patton. Cindy. 1993. "From Nation to Family: Containing African
AIDS," pp. 127 -138, in Abelove, Henry, Barale, Michele
Aina & Halperin, David M, eds. 1993. The Lesbian and Gay Studies
Reader. Routledge: New York.
10. Pettifora, A., Van
der Straten, A., Dunbara, M., Shiboski, S., Padian, N. 2004. "Early
Age of First Sex: A Risk Factor for HIV infection among women in
Zimbabwe," in AIDS, vol. 18. Page 1435.
11. Ibid.
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