‘God Gave us Legs to Walk!’

M. Grundlingh
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Abstract

Domestic work is a major source of income for many Black African women in South Africa. The experience of domestic workers is mainly shaped along racial and class lines – this is a result of the remnants of the legacy of apartheid, where many Coloured and African women were dependent on employment in the domestic work sphere. This article considers the experiences of a group of Coloured female domestic workers in a coastal town in South Africa. Drawing on ten qualitative interviews, I show how their experiences are framed around issues of mobility – this includes moving to work and moving at work and the consequences of immobility in the world of work. Most research that deals with issues of mobility in domestic work focuses on migration patterns. This novel approach to understanding the notion of mobility for domestic workers contributes to the existing literature on domestic work in South Africa but extends the conceptualisation of movement beyond migration patterns. The article also makes a much-needed contribution to understanding the experience of domestic work in rural settings in South Africa. This is done by exploring the coping strategies that the participants employ to support themselves and their families. Networks and family ties form an essential component of the financial and emotional survival of this group of women. The role of social capital is also investigated as it plays an important role in forging trust and reciprocity among participants of this study.
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“上帝给了我们走路的腿!””
家务劳动是南非许多非洲黑人妇女的主要收入来源。家务工人的经历主要是按种族和阶级界线形成的,这是种族隔离遗留下来的结果,许多有色人种和非洲妇女依赖于家务工作领域的就业。本文讲述了一群有色人种女工在南非一个沿海城镇的生活经历。通过十次定性访谈,我展示了他们的经历是如何围绕流动性问题构建的——这包括上班和在工作中移动,以及在工作世界中不动的后果。大多数关于家务流动问题的研究都集中在移徙模式上。这种理解家庭工人流动概念的新方法有助于南非现有的家庭工作文献,但将运动的概念化扩展到迁移模式之外。这篇文章也为理解南非农村家务工作的经验作出了急需的贡献。这是通过探索参与者用来支持自己和家人的应对策略来完成的。网络和家庭关系是这群妇女在经济和情感上生存的重要组成部分。社会资本在参与者之间建立信任和互惠的过程中发挥了重要作用,因此本文也对社会资本的作用进行了研究。
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