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Gender and Agriculture. Perpetuating Gender Inequalities . Social Construction . Gender is not biological, but rather a social construction Although many stereotypes of masculinity and femininity change with different time periods, some remain enduring over time.
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Gender and Agriculture Perpetuating Gender Inequalities
Social Construction • Gender is not biological, but rather a social construction • Although many stereotypes of masculinity and femininity change with different time periods, some remain enduring over time. • Through patriarchy femininity and masculinity are both defined and perpetuated.
Media’s Role • Agricultural media displays patriarchical families. • The machinery used on the farm is closely related to the stereotypes given to men and women - Tractor - Oven
…continued • Agricultural product names, such as pesticides and herbicides, are almost always masculine. • Warrior • Prowl • Bicep • Counter Lock’n Load
Race and the Media • Kroma suggests that race is also a social construct rather than a biological one. • Agricultural product advertisements only contain Caucasians. • “Whiteness” in these advertisements is a norm that perpetuates racial segregation in the farming community.
“The imagery embodied in pesticide advertisements bears out the critical feminist theoretical position that power is not a monolithic force that men, as a social group, have over women. Rather, the imagery attests to the multiplicity of relations of subordination and power that is consistently played out in the agricultural sphere: men dominate other men, just as they dominate women.”
The Poisoning of Indigenous Migrant Women in Mexico • The visions and experiences of indigenous women are silenced. • Indigenous groups are viewed as lazy and unwilling to live civilized by Mestizos (the Mexican middle class). • These groups have not benefitted from industrialization or modern agriculture. - forced to migrate to urban areas - plantation hard labor
Mothers and Children • Children are forced to go with their mothers to the plantations to work. -Starting at 9 years of age or younger -too poor for daycare (non-existent) -some are forced to bring their infants -accused of being negligent parents This exposes the whole family to harmful pesticides and herbicides.
Empty Promises • Indigenous families are promised adequate housing and wages. • When they arrive many times housing is still in the process of being “built” and are forced to build cardboard homes. • Fires • Water
On the Plantation • Mestizo and Indigenous women are structurally segregated. • Indigenous women are not informed about the toxicity of the pesticides. • Many times indigenous women are too poor to purchase protective gear such as gloves, face masks etc. • Mestizo women receive 2-3 times better pay and indigenous women.
…continued • These structures set in place perpetuate stereotypes which “normalize indigenous women’s exclusion. • Indigenous women are neglected health care because they are too “dumb” and cannot speak Spanish. • Often times women are forced to drink water from containers used to mix the pesticides.
Acute Symptoms • Racing heart beat • Loss of consciousness • Pounding headache • High temperature • Nausea • Burning skin
Chronic Symptoms • Long term symptoms have not been determined yet. • Pesticides contain “inactive” ingredients, which are not required to be tested for possible acute or chronic heath effects.
“Behind the perfect looking tomato, there are thousands of hidden oppressive realities.” • What, then, is our responsibility in the North? • How can we build solidarity? • How can we raise our consciousness so that we are aware of the food we are eating, where it comes from and who, in fact, puts it on our tables?