Motherhood

I don't Know What to Say to my Mother

Theme: 
Movement Building Initiative
Video: 
See video
Year and month: 
May, 2008
Project Title: 
Just Associates and Women'sNet
Narrator / Story teller: 
Nkhumiseni Tshivhase
Digital Story video length (mm:ss): 
02:21
Location: 
Johannesburg, South Africa
Note: 
Created during "Telling Our Stories," a JASS digital storytelling workshop held at Women's Net in Johannesburg, South Africa, May 21-25th, 2008. Part of JASS' Feminist Movement Building Initiative in Southern Africa. Visit www.justassociates.org for more information.

Marriage,Motherhood and Masculinity in the Global Economy: Reconfiguration of Personal and Economic Life (IDS Working Paper 290)

Publisher: 
Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex Brighton
Author: 
Naila Kabeer
Published Date: 
2007
Abstract: 

The different processes associated with globalisation have led to rising rates of paid work by women often in contexts where male employment is stagnant or declining. This paper explores how women and men are dealing with this feminisation of labour markets in the face of the widespread prevalence of male breadwinner ideologies and the apparent threat to male authority represented by women's earnings. Responses have varied across the world but there appears to be a remarkable resistance to changes in the domestic division of unpaid work within the household and a continuing failure on the part of policymakers to provide support for women's care responsibilities, despite the growing importance of their breadwinning roles. Many of the services previously provided on an unpaid basis are being transferred to the paid economy but most working women continue to bear a disproportionate burden of domestic responsibility. There is evidence that women may be using their newly acquired earning power to challenge the injustice of the double work burden in ways that pose a challenge to long-term processes of social reproduction.

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