Conclusion: Accumulation, Resistance and the
Reproduction of Stratification
The discourse on
gender, male/female roles and the division of labour which
links 'farm-food-female' as a gender marker appears essentially
the same today as it was forty years ago. The context, however,
has changed significantly in association with increasing
integration of the local economy into the world market. This
can be characterized as a situation of increasing
commodification, including but not limited to privatization of
land, and an associated increase in economic stratification. In
these changing material conditions, gender discourse, which
makes women responsible for providing food but does not give
them control over productive resources, leads to increased
inequality, marginalizes and impoverishes women, and endangers
food self-sufficiency. Demands on women's time and labour have
greatly increased over the last four decades while their access
to land has been threatened. At the same time new
opportunities, including education and access to paid work,
have opened up new avenues of opportunity for some women. While
women as a category have been disadvantaged by commodification
and the spread of the market economy, they have also become
multi-vocal, with distinctions based on criteria other than age
and seniority becoming increasingly important in determining
their life position and chances.
As both the national State and the Nso' elite continue to
pursue hegemony, it is important to pinpoint the mechanisms by
which the national elites constitute and validate themselves,
and to locate forms of local resistance (Bayart 1979 and 1981;
Geschiere 1986). The women's voices with which I opened this
paper form one discourse of counter-hegemony. In the refusal of
a number of women to underwrite their husbands' lives and
projects, and in their decisions to acquire their own symbolic
capital, lie further modes of resistance to male power.
Ultimately it is in marriage strategies that we will be able to
locate both the formation of elites, and also a form of
resistance which will challenge the composition of gender
categories, the structure of gender relations, and the hegemony
of male power.
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