African Women Research Paper

Words: 999
Pages: 4

African women had experienced oppression, violence and brutal treatment throughout the history and until now, but they had equal freedom and roles in the society, which allowed them to live in company with men before the British Colonization. Women held positions that were visually perceived with equal rights to those positions held by a man. British colonization transformed the world and roles within that world for all components of the indigenous society, but women’s roles took the greatest fall. African societies were harshly settled into the British ways. African women’s roles were extremely changed socially, politically, and economically along with the emergence of high degree gender inequality when the influence of English Christian missionaries and …show more content…
Since the women lose their control over their land, they became more dependent on men. Hence they personally have gone through a lot of difficulties by this land alienation. In general, talking about African women, Sacks indicates that, “the value of women’s producing and processing food, established and maintained their rights in domestic and other sphere such as economic, religious, social, political etc” (Seenarine,66). The emergence of colonialism and the world economy affected African tribal Kikuyu (CITATION) ladies to lose their lands. this meant a loss of use the authority over land. The women from Kikuyu tribal society found that they will never have the different types of soils needed to grow the indigenous foodstuffs. Women were the food producers in the African Land, after the land alienation their economic independence was fell down gradually. As colonialism sustainable to settle in itself in African soil, the visually perceived importance of women’s agriculture commitment to the family was decreased as their basic part in production was dominated by the more profitable male-controlled cash crop