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Holding body and soul together: utilizing women's options in a changing Zimbabwean society

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posted on 2024-09-06, 06:07 authored by Barbara A. Moss
Prior to the coming of Europeans to what is now Zimbabwe African women occupied positions of importance and respect by virtue of their roles as wives and agriculturalists. Their primary responsibility of providing food for the family granted them access to land rights. Women also played an influential role in the family as the Semukadzi, Tete or Bambomukunda. She was one's sister, father's sister, grandfather's sister or great grandfather’s sister. Her role was that of family lawyer, and judge in household quarrels, inheritance disputes, and intra-family relationships. Traditionally her power and influence stemmed from the fact that her lobola was used by some member, or members, of her father’s family to secure their own wives, thus she assumed the title of Semukadzi "the owner of the wife.

A History research paper onthe changing roles of women in Zimbabwe; pre-colonial to present day.

History

Publisher

Department of History, University of Zimbabwe.

Citation

Moss, B.A. (1988) Holding body and soul together: utilizing women's options in a changing Zimbabwean society, Henderson History Seminar Series Paper No. 74. Harare: UZ.

Series

Henderson Seminar Paper 74

IDS Item Types

Series paper (non-IDS)

Copyright holder

University of Zimbabwe (UZ), Department of History.

Country

Zimbabwe.

Language

en

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    University of Zimbabwe Social Sciences Research

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