Women Strategizing Through Inyumba Mboke Marriage in Tanzania

Nandera E Mhando

Abstract


This article explores the politics of a wife’s house and ways in which women act to maintain or build their ‘houses’. Inyumba mboke marriagesconsist of two Kuria words: inyumba, meaning the physical house, and also referring to a mother and her children; and mboke, which refers to the need for that house to stand or progress by marrying a wife to bear children for that house.The paper explains the position that both women and men play in marriage arrangements, and the reasons for continuing the practice. Gender is in some contexts flexible, as there are prospects for negotiation and even change in role and status, rendering gendered identities highly fluid. Yet biological sex is also of enormous significance because only women can give birth to children. Thus, infertility and even death can be overcome as sonless or childless women (dead or alive), and dead men may acquire offspring. In this regard, rather than seeing these relationships as ‘woman-to-woman marriage’ or ‘ghost marriage’, this study suggests that they comprise various different kinship and marriage relations that allow women to reproduce for the lineage, and to make descendants for themselves, even in the absence of husbands, lovers, and/or ‘real’ sons.


References


Amadiume, I. 1987. Male Daughters, Female Husbands: Gender and Sex in an African Society. London: Zed Books Ltd.

Baker, E.C. 1935. The Bakuria of Musoma Tanganyika Territory. Cory Collection, University of Dar es Salaam, Dar es Salaam.

Bohannan, P. 1963. Social Anthropology. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

Chacha, B.K. 2005. Traversing Gender and the Colonial Madness: Same Sex Relationships, Customary law and Change in Tanzania, 1891-1990. In Gender Activism and Studies in Africa, Gender Series 3: 129–151. CODESRIA, Dakar.

Cory, H. 1945. Kuria Law and Custom. Cory Collection, University of Dar es Salaam.

Davis, D.L. & Whitten, R.G. 1987. The Cross-Cultural Study of Human Sexuality. Annual Review of Anthropology, 16: 69–98.

Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1951. Kinship and Marriage among the Nuer. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Gershon, I. 2009. Living Theory. Critique of Anthropology, 29(4): 397–422.

Gluckman, M. 1950. Kinship and Marriage among the Lozi of Northern Rhodesia and the Zulu of Natal. In A.R. Radcliffe-Brown & D. Forde (eds.).

African Systems of Kinship and Marriage. London: Oxford University Press.

Guyer, J. I. 1981. Household and Community in African Studies, Social Science and Humanistic Research on Africa: An Assessment. African Studies Review 24(2/3): 87–137.

Guyer, J. I. & E. Peters. 1987. Introduction. Development and Change, 18(2): 197–214.

Greene, B. 1998. The Institution of Woman-Marriage in Africa: A Cross-Cultural Analysis. Ethnology, 37(4): 395–412.

Herskovits, M. 1937. A Note on Woman Marriage in Dahomey. Africa, 10(3): 335–341.

Huber, H. 1968/69. Woman Marriage in Some East African Societies. Anthropos, 63/64: 745–752.

Krige, E. J. 1974. Woman Marriage, with Special Reference to the Lovedu: Its Significance for the Definition of Marriage. Africa: Journal of International African Institute, 44(1): 11–37.

Mackenzie, F. 1989. Land and Territory: The Interface between Two Systems of Land Tenure, Murang’a District, Kenya. Africa, 59(1): 91–109.

Mackenzie, F. 1990. Gender and Land Rights in Murang’a District Kenya. Journal of Peasant Studies, 17(4): 609–43.

Mackenzie, F. 1998. Land, Ecology and Resistance in Kenya, 1880–1952. London: Edinburgh University for International African Institute.

Maningo, D. 2014a. ‘Ndoa ya Nyumba Intobhu Inavyodumishwa Tarime’ (‘The Way Woman- to-woman Marriage is Upheld in Tarime’). Mwananchi, 4 October, 28.

Maningo, D. 2014b. ‘Nyumba Intobhu Zinavyohatarisha Maisha Ya Wanawake Tarime’ (‘Woman-to-woman Marriage Indangers the Life of Women in Tarime’). Mwananchi, 5 October, 32.

Mara Regional Commissioner’s Office (MRCO). 2013. Plan for Accelerated Reduction of Maternal and Newwborn Deaths 2013–2016, MRCO, Musoma

.

Masinde, J. 2014. ‘Nyumbantobu Yamtesa’ (‘Woman-to-woman Cause Hardship to a Married Woman’). The Citizen, 11 September, 21–22.

Maweni Farmers 2012. Nyumba Nthobu-Maweni Farmers Documentaries. Available from: http: //www.youtube.com/watch?v=9PoNKC3e1KM (Accessed 17 September 2014).

Meng’anyi, W. 2014. A Husband Stab His Wife in the Butt with an Arrow (Mume Amchoma Mkewe Mshale Kwenye Makalio), Mwananchi, October 10, 8.

Mhando, N. E. 2005. ‘Woman-Marriage’ as Practiced by Wakuria of Northern Tanzania. Masters Dissertation, University of Dar es Salaam.

Mhando, N.E. 2014. The Impact of External Institutions on Kuria Marriages in Tanzania. African Review: A Journal of Politics, Development and International Affairs, 41(2): 55–84.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.