Abstract:
Women form the majority of the world’s population. Despite this, their representation
in politics, economic and social spheres of life are minimal due to how society
constructs their womanhood. This societal construction has been used to socialize
women and girls into stereotypical feminine roles and jobs, hence limiting their
capability to harness their full agency. It is on this basis that this study sought to
understand how Maasai women teachers construct their womanhood in Kajiado
County, Kenya. The objectives of this study were; to explore how primary schools
Maasai women teachers construct their womanhood within the Maasai cultural context
in Kajiado County, Kenya, to explore how primary schools Maasai women teachers
construct their womanhood within the teaching profession in Kajiado County, Kenya
and to explore how primary schools Maasai women teachers construct their
womanhood within Kajiado County, Kenya. This qualitative study was guided by the
interpretive paradigm and the phenomenological research design. The theoretical
framing of the study was the social constructionist theory. Data was generated through
drawings and focus group discussions with rural primary school Maasai women
teachers. Participant selection was done through purposive sampling. Thematic analysis
was used to get meaning from the generated data. The findings of this study reveal that
the Maasai women teachers constructed their womanhood in accordance with their
socialization within the Maasai cultural context. Their constructions were based on
normative (what society expects of a Maasai woman) assumptions of womanhood like
procreation, mothering and the male gaze (lenses on how male members of the society
view a woman) like being submissive and beautiful. Within the teaching profession, the
women teachers constructed their womanhood through liberal lenses, thus constructing
their womanhood as inspirational and knowledgeable role models. Within Kajiado
County, the women teachers constructed their womanhood as an empowerment
powerhouse. Thus, based on these findings, it can be concluded that education played
a major role in how these Maasai women teachers constructed their womanhood
positively. This study, therefore, recommends; that provision of education among
Maasai communities could benefit women and girls in constructing their womanhood
and femininity positively; That provision of inclusive quality education among Maasai
communities, especially rural communities, such that women and girls can become
agents of change and lastly, education contributes to the socio-economic and political
spheres of Maasai women and the other women in the country at large.