性别身份与性身体的重新谈判:南非津巴布韦移民妇女日常生活的叙述

K. Batisai, Lylian Manjowo
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引用次数: 2

摘要

大量文献表明,在历史上,许多非洲社会的女性一直面临着父权制的挑战,在家庭中缺乏自由——这一挑战也反映在教育、经济、法律和政治制度中。这种性别地位造成性别不平等,导致妇女比男子更严重地遭受贫穷。多年来,贫穷女性化导致移徙女性化,这意味着妇女移徙身份和作用的变化,妇女越来越多地作为独立移徙者移徙,而不是与男性家庭成员团聚。妇女移徙往往是由于希望获得更大的自主权和减少对其生产和生殖机构的社会限制。他们还移徙以增加其经济机会,并寻求新的生存战略,努力满足其家庭的需要和与他们自身有关的需要。正是在这样的背景下,本文探讨了移民女性的经历,以及她们在克服重重困难,重新协商和重建自己的性别身份和性身体时所采取的策略,以便在“异国”空间的复杂现实中生存下来。这篇文章聚焦于15名津巴布韦移民妇女的女性化贫困经历,这些经历将她们赶出了家园的边界,以及作为她们在南非生存策略一部分的性和性别生计。由于这篇文章涉及津巴布韦移民妇女在移居南非之前和之后的经历,它正在阐明性和移民是如何相互塑造和重塑的。这篇文章分析了性在性别和移民研究中的作用,这在全球南方国家没有得到应有的重视。总的来说,这篇文章揭示了性别和移民研究中经常包含和隐藏的性作用,这给南非津巴布韦移民妇女的身体、身份和角色增加了另一层复杂的脆弱性。
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Renegotiating Gender Identities and Sexual Bodies: Zimbabwean Migrant Women’s Narratives of Everyday Life in South Africa
A wide range of literature reveals that women in many African societies have historically been faced with the challenge of patriarchy and lack of freedom in their households—a challenge also mirrored in institutions of education, the economy, law and politics. This gendered position produces gendered inequalities which lead women to experience poverty more severely than men. The feminisation of poverty has over the years resulted in the feminisation of migration, which implies a change in women’s migratory identities and roles, where women are increasingly migrating as independent migrants rather than to rejoin male family members. Often, women migrate due to a desire for greater autonomy and a decrease in social restrictions on their productive and reproductive bodies. They also migrate to enhance their economic opportunities and seek new survival strategies in their endeavour to cater for their family’s needs and those that pertain to their being. It is against this backdrop that this article explores the experiences of migrant women and the strategies they employ as they, against all odds, renegotiate and reconstitute their gendered identities and sexual bodies in order to survive the complex realities of living in a “foreign” space. The article focuses on 15 Zimbabwean migrant women’s experiences of feminised poverty that pushed them out of the boundaries of their homeland, and the sexual and gendered livelihoods that emerged as part of their survival strategies in South Africa. As the article engages with Zimbabwean migrant women’s experiences prior to and after moving to South Africa, it is at work to illuminate how sexuality and migration shape and reshape one another. The article analyses the role of sexuality in gender and migration research that has not been given the pre-eminence it should in the Global South. Overall, the article reveals that the often subsumed and hidden role of sexuality in gender and migration research adds another complex layer of vulnerability to the bodies, identities and roles of Zimbabwean migrant women in South Africa.
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