Women’s Work

Women’s Work

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Gender roles are strictly divided in Sub-Saharan Africa – more so here than in any other place I’ve traveled. Women perform most of the tasks here from fetching water, to washing clothes, to taking a child to the hospital. However, few roles are solely set aside for men, except perhaps playing football or napping in the afternoon shade. A breach of code whereby men venture into women’s work is a sore embarrassment and one not to be done publicly. For the majority of those living on this continent life is hard. For women, the burden is harder still.
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Oct 13, 2009 by Jake

Related categories:
Photo Essay

3 comments

I concur with your observations Jake. Did you see differences or similarities in these roles in urban vs. rural areas? I definitely noticed the lions’ share of work done by women in the rural villages in Zimbabwe. In the urban areas it may have been a bit more equal with men working in professions or trades during the day. Still, without the work of the women of Africa, where would the continent be today? Wonderful, story-telling images.

Sat, 10/31/09 :: 5:45 AM
by Gordon Schmidt

Good point Gordon.
Women definitely have high level jobs in the cities, right along with the men. Men also cook and clean for a living in urban areas for sure. But even in the urban home it seems that the gender lines are strictly drawn.
Women are definitely the backbone of Africa.

Tue, 11/3/09 :: 7:14 PM
by Jake

[...] in the developing world, more likely to support their families and, as you can see from a past blog entry, doing most of the work here anyway. According to the Gates Foundation, women do about 80% of farm [...]

Fri, 02/19/10 :: 7:16 PM
by Blog | Jake Lyell Photography - Photographer & Photojournalist | Tanzania & Uganda, East Africa

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