Gender roles in Sri Lanka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sri Lankan woman and child
Sri Lankan woman and child

All ethnic groups in Sri Lanka preserve clear distinctions in the roles of the sexes.

Women are responsible for cooking, raising children, and taking care of housework. In families relying on agriculture, women are in charge of weeding and help with the harvest, and, among poor families, women also perform full-time work for the more well-to-do. The man's job is to protect women and children and provide them with material support, and in this role men dominate all aspects of business and public life. At the center of the system are children, who mix freely until puberty and receive a great deal of affection from both sexes. As they enter their teens, children begin to adopt the adult roles that will keep them in separate worlds: girls help with household chores and boys work outside the home. Among the middle- and upper-income groups, however, education of children may last into their early twenties, and women may mix with males or even take on jobs that were in the past reserved for men. There has been a tendency to view the educational qualifications of women as a means for obtaining favorable marriage alliances, and many middle-class women withdraw from the workplace after marriage.

[edit] References

This article contains material from the Library of Congress Country Studies, which are United States government publications in the public domain. (Data as of 1988.)