Abstract

Middle East women’s active participation in resisting against socio-political impositions and constraints has received scant attention in the existing scholarship within the field. Much of the literature is focused on the socially victimized, subjugated and passive state of the female subjects in facing patriarchal authoritarianism and repression. In contrast, this article aims at exploring the subjected women’s investment in multifarious acts of resistance through their leisure time and practices. To this end, Foucault’s notion of “counter-conduct,” a mode of resistance to be governed differently, is used to examine women’s leisure activities in Jean P. Sasson’s (1992) Princess: A True Story of Life Behind the Veil in Saudi Arabia , Azar Nafisi’s (2003) Reading Lolita in Tehran and Manal al-Sharif’s (2017) Daring to Drive . The analysis of these narratives within the power/resistance framework underlines the shifting complexities of the female participants’ life course, and reveals that the subjugated women’s trajectory in the stories is a gradual progression from pure submissiveness towards an active engagement in social, cultural and political realities. Throughout the narratives, women use leisure time and activities such as driving, reading and bonding in parallel to dominant techniques of governmentality to produce alternative subjectivities. The study concludes that the life accounts do not merely provide an oversimplified depiction of Middle East women as passive victims of a misogynistic cultural tradition, but rather chronicle women’s active protests—i.e., individual and collective revolts of conduct, acts of opposition and violations of established norms—similar to the forms of counter-conduct theorized by Foucault.

Highlights

  • Contemporary life narratives by or about Middle East women describe the situation of women in the region as constantly subjected to repressive structures of patriarchal power

  • Foucault’s (2009) notion of “counter-conduct,” a mode of resistance to be governed differently, is used to examine the ways repressed women use private sphere and activities—not least leisure time and practices—to interrogate their own invisibility within the existing cultural discourses and resist against the normalized behavior expected from all female subjects

  • More domestic ways in which women use leisure time and space as a site of counter-conduct to resist against gendered inequalities and patriarchal authoritarianism are illustrated through two other life narratives: Nafisi’s Reading Lolita in Tehran and the Saudi princess Sultana’s story, ghost-written by Sasson

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Contemporary life narratives by or about Middle East women describe the situation of women in the region as constantly subjected to repressive structures of patriarchal power. Sasson’s (1992) Princess: A True Story of Life Behind the Veil in Saudi Arabia, Azar Nafisi’s (2003) Reading Lolita in Tehran and Manal al-Sharif’s (2017) Daring to Drive as they have been the subject of scathing criticism over their controversial depictions of Muslim women’s level of personal agency These works portray female characters from two major countries of the region, Saudi Arabia and Iran, and provide us with valuable and original insights into daily lives of women as recounted in their own words. In exploring these narratives, Foucault’s (2009) notion of “counter-conduct,” a mode of resistance to be governed differently, is used to examine the ways repressed women use private sphere and activities—not least leisure time and practices—to interrogate their own invisibility within the existing cultural discourses and resist against the normalized behavior expected from all female subjects. This will be followed by a close reading of the selected narratives to identify the ways in which leisure is used by women as a political practice to enhance individual independence and bring about broader social change

LITERATURE REVIEW
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call