‘Mɔn’ (to marry/to cook): negotiating becoming a wife and woman in the kitchens of a northern Ghanaian Konkomba community
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Date
2015-01
Type of Work
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Towson University. Department of Geography & Environmental Planning
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Citation of Original Publication
Hanrahan, K. B. (2015). ‘Mɔn’ (To Marry/To Cook): Negotiating becoming a wife and woman in the kitchens of a northern Ghanaian Konkomba community. Gender, Place and Culture, 22(9), 1323-1339. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2014.993360
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
Abstract
In this article, I consider the kitchen as domestic space that is at once gendered and gendering in its construction and use by women as they negotiate their social position across the life course. Deeply rooted patriarchal values structure Konkomba society in northern Ghana, and a woman’s role is to be a wife, to prepare food in support of her husband’s family and community. Although the normative definition of woman’s role in society stems from a clear-cut division of labor between women and men, a woman must negotiate her social position and ability to fulfill these labor obligations; she becomes a woman and wife by working to gain access to and control over resources and labor. I explore the shifting dynamics of women’s work and social position across the life course, emphasizing the transition from young woman to woman-as-wife-as-cook in her husband’s community. These negotiations take place in the kitchen – a fiercely feminine space in which a woman becomes a wife when she earns the right to place hearth stones and prepare a ceremonial ‘first meal’ for her husband and his community.