The widow, the will, and widow-inheritance in Kampala: Revisiting victimisation arguments.

Date
2009
Authors
Nyanzi, Stella
Emodu-Walakira, Margaret
Serwaniko, Wilberforce
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Abstract
Widows are often presented as victims of patriarchal sexual dictates in analyses of widow-inheritance. Our study explored experiences of widowhood in Kampala. Ethnographic fieldwork combined participant observation, semi-structured individual interviews, and focus group discussions. Widows are heterogeneous. Many husbands died intestate. Husbands commonly exclude their wives from will-writing. A Muganda man's last funeral rites include widow-cleansing. Widows get omukuza - levirate guardian. Our data contest overt sexualisation of levirate relationships. Exchange and opportunity cost are crucial to sexualising of processes within widowhood. Meanings associated with widowhood are transforming. Rather than a frozen construct, sexuality of widows is changing because of HIV/AIDS, intermarriages, religious synchronisations, recurrent deaths, and poverty. While some widows felt victims of circumstances leading to sexual activities with levirate-guardians, many others challenged sexualising the levirate relationship. A few benefited from sexually engaging with levirate-guardians. Victimisation is only one of many meanings interloped within widowhood.
Description
Keywords
Gender, Culture, Widowhood, Sexuality, Customary law, Wills, Levirate, Marriage, Urban areas, Buganda
Citation
Nyanzi, S. (2009). The widow, the will, and widow-inheritance in Kampala: Revisiting victimisation arguments. Canadian Journal of African Studies, 43(1) 12-33.