Article

Feminist Review (2003) 75, 101–117. doi:10.1057/palgrave.fr.9400061

The sabotage of patriarchy in colonial Rhodesia, rural african women's living legacy to their daughters

Julia C Wells

Top

Abstract

Evidence from a University of Zimbabwe oral history project suggests that many rural women in colonial Rhodesia played an active role in undermining patriarchal customs which they experienced as oppressive. These women defied family norms by choosing their own marriage partners, prioritizing the formal education of their daughters and finding ways to generate income to secure greater degrees of autonomy. This study compliments other research which depicts women's primary form of resistance to be moving from rural to urban areas, by showing what options some women exercised while remaining within rural society.

Keywords:

Rhodesia, women, Zimbabwe, patriarchy, resistance, oral history

Extra navigation

.

FR resources

ADVERTISEMENT
Feminist Theory & Activism in Global Perspective
Link to Complete Online Archive
Power, movements, change - Development vol. 52 issue 2, June 2009
Sexuality and Development - Development Volume 54, Issue 2, March 2009
Postmedieval - a journal of medieval cultural studies, new in 2010