Times Of Swaziland: ENGAGING WITH AFRICAN FEMINIST INTERPRETATIONS OF MATERNAL

ENGAGING WITH AFRICAN FEMINIST INTERPRETATIONS OF MATERNAL
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Oguchukwu Udenigwe on 24/03/2025 08:36:00


There is increased advocacy for reclaiming subjugated knowledge that has been
pushed to the margins of modern society, and highlighting knowledge predicated
on the diversity of humanity. WHO Africa highlights the importance of pushing
forward with a gender agenda towards the improvement of maternal health and
women’s health more broadly.  I argue that a gender agenda provides the
stimulus for engaging with knowledge from the margins or what feminist author
Patricia Hill Collins refers to as subjugated knowledge. Subjugated knowledge in
this case refers to African women’s lived experiences that have been routinely
distorted or discounted. Feminist interpretations of African women’s
experiences serve as lenses to understand social structures and mechanisms
impacting maternal health and well-being.
One of the most intense debates among African feminists occurs around
interpretations of motherhood and its relationship with patriarchal culture.
Some feminists argue that the valorisation of motherhood serves as an
essentialist marker for female authenticity within patriarchal cultures. Others
deconstruct motherhood beyond the act of childbirth and childcare stating that
motherhood is not an institution constructed by patriarchy, but an experience
created by women as an act of freedom and self-determination.
Invite
Admittedly, to engage with marginal discourse or acknowledge subjugated
knowledge is to wrestle with such contradictions. Nonetheless, African feminist
writers invite us to rethink the legitimacy of representations of motherhood
foregrounded in mainstream culture and centre the experiences of African women.
The mother figure is revered and idealised throughout African societies and
cultures reflecting strong pro-natalist values. African feminist scholar Ifi
Amadiume explains that motherhood is viewed as sacred in African traditions and
societies. Nkolika Aniekwu concurs and emphasises the agency of African women as
defenders of their rights to motherhood. In African feminist literary works,
‘the mother’ as a metaphor has been used to elevate and celebrate women’s
roles in society while deconstructing symbolisms that debase women in
masculine-ordered discourses. Similarly, Nortje-Meyer describes mothering as an
inherently African way of care that also includes non-maternal care provided to
a group or community.
African feminists are troubled by the theorised association between motherhood
and victimhood, theories that  African feminist scholar Oyèrónkẹ́
Oyěwùmí argues find their origins in Western epistemes that are based on
rigid dichotomies such as the mind/body. The mind (often regarded as male) is
exalted as a site of reason and restraint and the body (often regarded as
female) is demeaned as a site of irrationality and moral corruption. These
dichotomies define the structuring principle of Western societies along gender
binaries – man or woman.
Guide
In Indigenous African societies, rigid gender ideology do not necessarily guide
social organising and women have been shown to take on roles of authority and
power. Oyěwùmí highlights chronological age and position within the family as
organising principles in some African societies. Seniority, she explains, is the
dominant language of power in Nigeria’s Yoruba culture, therefore elderly
women, based on their chronological age and status as mothers, wield significant
power in society.
Oyěwùmí’s assertions confirm earlier descriptions of women’s influence in
society. Ifi Amadiume illustrated the socio-cultural significance of elderly
mothers who were shown to wield considerable power in formal and informal
settings to negotiate and safeguard women’s interests.
The elderly women were considered above patriarchal control and therefore had
access to spaces and roles monopolised by men. It is worth noting that in
African contexts, all women are considered mothers, even if they do not have
their own biological children, this suggests the influence of all elderly women.
Aniekwu concurs that while male dominance is assumed at many levels of society
including domestic spheres, there continues to be pre and post-colonial evidence
of high-level women, especially older women, in political, economic and domestic
spheres that represent women’s interests.
African feminist interpretations have implications for discourses surrounding
maternal health. For example, maternal health programmes predicted on a gender
framework may erroneously attribute household decision-making power to only men
while ignoring the influence of elderly mothers and mother figures. The evidence
of older women’s influence on household maternal and child health matters
remains constant. Earlier feminist writings showed older women’s role in
safeguarding maternal health in informal spaces; within their families, elderly
mothers in Igbo communities of Nigeria enforced traditional rules that supported
child spacing.
Influential
They also enforced traditional rules that protected women from domestic
violence. Similar examples show that older women are influential in changing
harmful norms that negatively impact maternal health such as abandoning the
practice of female genital mutilation or cutting. Furthermore, African feminist
understandings of motherhood elevate the concerns of mothers in their diversity.
As Bernedette Muthien explains, matricentric practices that exist across the
African continent value mothers as the source of life and creation and are
rooted in principles of spirituality in healing and care activities. The
importance of spirituality in matricentric societies speaks to the need for
spiritual support within maternal healthcare services, a necessity that African
women desire but has long been ignored in maternal healthcare.
African feminists are actively resisting assumptions about the homogeneity of
women’s experiences and challenging assumptions of commonality in feminist
expressions. Understanding motherhood in African contexts entails unlearning
oppressive dimensions of motherhood as defined by the West.
Engaging with ancient and existing knowledge on motherhood is important given
the continued centrality of motherhood in African contexts. Feminist
interpretations enrich this knowledge and serve as lenses to understand social
structures and mechanisms impacting maternal health and well-being.