Migration and mutual articulation with normative masculinity in Zimbabwe

Jaji, Rose
External Publications (2023)

in: Garth Stahl / Yang Zhao (eds.), Migratory Men: Place, Transnationalism and Masculinities, Abingdon and New York: Routledge, 174-187

Information

This chapter addresses the evolution of the relationship between masculinity and migration within a Zimbabwean historical, sociocultural, economic and political context. It discusses how migration transitioned from a gender-neutral to a masculinised and, later, feminised activity. The chapter argues that this gendered transition has varied and sometimes contradictory impacts on masculinity. The contradictions stem from men’s differential capacities (or lack thereof) to migrate and convert migration into a resource that can be channelled into performance of normative or socially approved masculinity. The chapter demonstrates how migration potentially resuscitates or erodes aspects of normative masculinity against a backdrop of the protracted economic crisis in Zimbabwe. The interaction between migration and masculinity is observable not only in homosocial relations but also in gender relations within marriages and family life. The chapter accordingly draws attention to contemporary migration, illustrating how its feminisation impacts on men who had hitherto enjoyed a monopoly on migration in the Zimbabwean context. The discussion of migration and masculinity in this chapter draws from qualitative research with Zimbabwean migrants in Germany and South Africa as well as with non-migrants in Zimbabwe.

About the author

Jaji, Rose

Anthropology

Jaji

Further experts

Christ, Simone

Social Anthropology 

Dippel, Beatrice

Comparatist 

Ekoh, Susan S.

Environmental Research 

Flaig, Merlin

Social Science 

Friesen, Ina

Political Science 

Kuhnt, Jana

Development Economist 

Martin-Shields, Charles

Political Science 

Roll, Michael

Sociology 

Sowa, Alina

Economics 

Stöcker, Alexander

Economics 

Zintl, Tina

Political Scientist