Women in Zambia

Women in Zambia

Author: Nakatiwa G. Mulikita

Publisher: Southern African Research and Documentation Centre

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 100

ISBN-13:

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New Women of Lusaka

New Women of Lusaka

Author: Ilsa M. Glazer

Publisher: McGraw-Hill Humanities, Social Sciences & World Languages

Published: 1979

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13:

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New Women of Lusakaexamines how educated young women in Zambia’s capital city are adapting to their new social and occupational status in society. The challenges that result from rapid social change appear through vivid descriptions of family, school, and social life in modern Lusaka.The author clearly shows how difficult and painful the process of culture change can be for individuals who become caught up in it through circumstances largely beyond their control.


What are the Effects of Cultural Traditions on the Education of women? (The Study of the Tumbuka People of Zambia)

What are the Effects of Cultural Traditions on the Education of women? (The Study of the Tumbuka People of Zambia)

Author: Christine Phiri Mushibwe

Publisher: Anchor Academic Publishing (aap_verlag)

Published: 2014-02-01

Total Pages: 290

ISBN-13: 3954895978

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Cultural traditions do adversely affect the education of many people in the world. Women are, unfortunately, the most affected victims of their culture. This book demonstrates how cultural traditions can militate against the education of women in Zambia with a focus on the Tumbuka tribe. The evidence at hand demonstrates that patrilineal groupings are strongholds of the patriarchal predisposition and patriarchal attitudes and cultural traditions do not recognize women as equal partners with men. The Tumbuka women’s experiences and beliefs reflect socio-cultural traditional norms that tend to limit gender equality, and compel women to accept and justify male domination at the expense of their own status and to regard consequent inequalities as normal. Evidence demonstrates that the initiation rites, an active institution for girls of pubescent age, interfere more with the school-based education of girls. The women are active social agents as well as passive learners who will not allow the girls they are coaching to question the purpose for some traditional practices that are oppressive and directly cause them to fail to complete their schooling successfully.


Bemba Speaking Women of Zambia in a Century of Religious Change

Bemba Speaking Women of Zambia in a Century of Religious Change

Author: Hugo F. Hinfelaar

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13: 9789004101494

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This book constitutes an important contribution to the study of religion in Africa as it traces the often painful changes that occurred among the Bemba-speaking women of Zambia since the arrival of the Western Missionaries. The author offers us his life-long search for the bed-rock of traditional religion as a basis for genuine cultural/religious development.