Research on humanities and social sciences | 2019

The Reason We Marry: Perceptions of Women’s Sexual Experiences in Zimbabwe

 
 
 

Abstract


This study is an interrogation of views and experiences of sexual encounters of women from affluent urban settings and those from traditional communal areas in the communities of Zimbabwe. The study is based on women only WhatsApp groups discussions on their sex lives. Using evidence from the sentiments, views, perceptions and experiences of women from the two different settings, this paper argues that women enjoy heterosexuality; their only problem is that their male colleagues do not perform up to their expectations. This state of affairs makes some segments of feminist scholars think that heterosexuality puts women in a perpetual subordinate position that reduces them to the mothering roles linked to their reproductive capacities. Nonetheless, the female voices in this study argue that although in some cases, they still experience oppression and dissatisfaction women in heterosexual relations have agency and capacity to assert themselves and control their sexual experiences so that they also enjoy sex to optimum levels. The study shows that women are not always passive participants within heterosexual relations for they are able to express their sexual desires freely and sometimes negotiate options for pleasurable sexual experiences. The study shows that heterosexuality is neither a hegemonic nor monolithic one size fits all experience, but a multifaceted heterogeneous experience in which both women and men negotiate their cases in their own special ways. Keywords: Sex, women, sexuality, affluent suburbs, communal areas, perceptions, experiences. DOI : 10.7176/RHSS/9-8-10 Publication date : April 30 th 2019

Volume 9
Pages 67-72
DOI 10.7176/rhss/9-8-10
Language English
Journal Research on humanities and social sciences

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