从照顾到交易:肯尼亚的女性政治家、母性和政治权威

Miriam Jerotich Kilimo
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摘要

女权主义学者注意到,母性为女性获得政治权威开辟了途径。对于非洲和黑人女性,学者们注意到,在政治领域以母亲的身份出现,可以让她们利用传统上让她们获得权力的身份。然而,这些关于母性和政治的观点特权了一种认为母性角色是无私和牺牲的观点。在这篇文章中,我建议在分析女性政治家如何利用母性时,超越母性的照顾维度。根据对2017年至2020年肯尼亚女性政治家的研究得出的证据,我认为,政治母性往往是一种交易。我并没有将女性政治家的行为解释为母性冲动在政治领域的延伸,而是说明了女性政治家如何以母性的好处换取公民的选票。通过将政治母性的含义多样化,超越照顾和公共角色,本文反驳了认为女性政治家不那么腐败或是父权政治受害者的观点。相反,通过突出政治母性的交易维度,本文说明了女性政治家如何策略性地利用性别身份来建立政治权威。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
From caretaking to transaction: Women politicians, motherhood, and political authority in Kenya

Feminist scholars have noted how motherhood opens avenues for women to access political authority. For African and Black women, scholars have noted how presenting themselves as mothers in the political sphere allows them to capitalize on an identity that traditionally allowed them access to power. However, these perspectives on motherhood and politics privilege a perspective on motherhood that deems the role as selfless and sacrificial. In this article, I propose moving beyond the caretaking dimensions of motherhood when analyzing how women politicians utilize motherhood. Drawing on evidence from research among Kenyan women politicians between 2017 and 2020, I argue that political motherhood often emerges as a transaction. Rather than interpreting the actions of women politicians as an extension of maternalistic impulses into the political realm, I illustrate how women politicians present the benefits of motherhood in exchange for citizens’ votes. By diversifying the meanings of political motherhood beyond caretaking and communal roles, this article counters perspectives that assume women politicians are less corrupt or are the victims of patriarchal politics. Instead, by foregrounding the transactional dimensions of political motherhood, this article illustrates how women politicians strategically use gendered identities to build political authority.

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