Gender Roles In The Igbo Tribe

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During post colonial times men and women in the Igbo society had several different roles in the household, the tribe, and in the fields. The male and female roles in the Igbo tribe are determined by many different things throughout the tribe. Genders help determine what that person will be doing. Men and women both have very important roles in the household, tribe, and fields. The women in the Igbo tribe are more in charge of the children, the cooking and the cleaning and the males are in charge of the fields and taking care of the family. The males are the more incharge gender within the tribe and the women must obey everything that the male wants.
Gender roles are based on several different things throughout the Igbo tribe. As inculcated …show more content…

Sex builds an important foundation for making choices, authority over assets, separation of work, valuing men/women connections in terms of gender roles in authority sharing and connection to evolution assets (Oluwagbemi-Jacob 224). Gender roles as shown are decided by many different things in the tribe. Gender plays a big role in the Igbo tribe. Oluwagbemi-Jacob says men and women gender parts are decided by the society because sexuality means opposite things. Being harsher to females, than to males is authority for sexuality. The females were supposed to be very proper and real and more attention was put on the female 's virginity. The gender roles are determined by the sexuality and manliness and feminism of the individual. This shows how some of the roles are chosen for the males and females. Males and females who were talented in the center of their manliness and feminism appropriately were acclaimed. Fortunate females got to take over men 's roles in the tribe. Something that has made an acceleration to several arguments is gender communication (Oluwagbemi-Jacob 225). The gender …show more content…

The woman was raised to be a great spouse, to play maternal acts, to be able to care for her spouse, to be devoted, to be proper, and to assist him with money and watch over her kids and care for the home through selling, retailing, and planting. The female was made to be industrious from her dad 's home so it would be beneficial in her spouse 's home (Oluwagbemi-Jacob 227). Women have several different roles throughout the house and on the land. The females had several more jobs than the male does. Oluwagbemi-Jacob stated “The females make the fire, do the cooking, and serve the meals etc… The females would sweep the kitchen and the rooms of the family houses… In all these chores, anything that would make the females expose the private parts of their bodies to outsiders is avoided and assigned to the males” (228). This shows that sometimes the women get out of doing certain chores because their private parts are not to be shown to any outsiders under any conditions. “Naturally, women are the birth-givers, as a result, musical practices around child birth; weaning and other related activities are the sole responsibilities of women. Similarly, there are roles which embody information or knowledge that men wish to pass or make exclusive to themselves” (Ibekwe 138). The women are the child bearers and are the ones that are fully responsible for

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