Joice Mujuru and the Zanu-PF Women's League 1973-2014: opportunities and limits of maternal dignity (musha mukadzi) and self-preservation

dc.contributor.advisorMagadla, Siphokazi
dc.contributor.authorMataruse, Sisasenkosi
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-03T13:52:14Z
dc.date.issued7/4/2022
dc.description.abstractThe foundations of African feminisms are intertwined with the historical liberation of the African continent. Joice Mujuru's five decades in Zimbabwean political parties are no different in showing the gendered nature of the fight against the intersectional oppressions of nation, race, class and gender. The research aimed to examine the political life of Joice Mujuru between 1973 and 2018 in various political roles and what this might mean for how women political leaders participate and make decisions as autonomous individuals within political parties in Zimbabwe. This study is a political biography of Joice Mujuru's ideas and leadership in political parties in Zimbabwe since 1973, when she joined the Zimbabwe African National Union "“ Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) as a guerilla of its military wing, the Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA). Mujuru was the only woman in the first ZANU-PF cabinet in 1980. She served the Zimbabwean government in different cabinet positions and became the first female vice-president in 2004, until her ousting in 2014. This study is based on an interview with Mujuru, and nine interviews with one Member of Parliament, two independent political party candidates, three academics, two CSO activists, the leader of LEAD political party in Zimbabwe and personal communication with a celebrated Zimbabwean writer. The study uses the concept of "patriarchal bargain" (Kandiyoti, 1988; Makhunga, 2016) and "femocracy" (Mama, 1995b) to show that Mujuru's participation in political parties has been shaped by compromising and negotiating a complex web of patriarchal constraints for acceptance and respect. This study shows that wifehood and motherhood, the idea of musha mukadzi ('woman as home'), stands out as a defining factor for Mujuru in her identity formation as a political party leader and how she views the roles of other women in Zimbabwean political parties and politics. I term this political identity maternal dignity, which is a collective set of ideas of maternal respect determining women's participation in political parties. The study shows that Mujuru uses dominant ideas of maternal dignity as a tool of self-presentation and self-preservation to survive as a political leader. Mujuru's expulsion from ZANU-PF and her subsequent leadership in other political parties demonstrates the ways in which maternal dignity limits women from shaping alternative ideas of leadership outside of respectable womanhood. Through a political biography of Mujuru, the study reaches the conclusion that post-independence Zimbabwe offers limited space for women's leadership, whether those women have liberation history credentials or not. The strategy of maternal dignity that Mujuru has used to navigate her political career is a "patriarchal bargain" with limited possibilities for women's meaningful participation, and the transformation of political parties and governance in Zimbabwe.
dc.description.degreeMaster's thesis
dc.description.degreeMA
dc.format.extent135 pages
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/292748
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/4684
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, Department of Political and International Studies
dc.rightsMataruse, Sisasenkosi
dc.subjectMujuru, Amai Joice T R (Amai Joice Teurai Ropa)
dc.subjectZANU Women's League
dc.subjectWomen and democracy -- Zimbabwe
dc.subjectWomen -- Political activity -- Zimbabwe
dc.subjectPolitical leadership -- Zimbabwe
dc.subjectSexism in political culture -- Zimbabwe
dc.subjectPatriarchy -- Zimbabwe
dc.subjectWomen -- Zimbabwe -- Social conditions
dc.subjectMaternal dignity (musha mukadzi)
dc.titleJoice Mujuru and the Zanu-PF Women's League 1973-2014: opportunities and limits of maternal dignity (musha mukadzi) and self-preservation
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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