Abstract

This article deals with young Arab Muslim women who have left their homes in order complete their academic education. An analysis of their life stories demonstrates the influence of the nuclear family in encouraging their studies and the expectations to be more independent than their mothers. In addition, the stories present the difficulties these students experience in the personal context, difficulties of being cut off from their families. Moreover, difficulties in the social and cultural contexts, in their insecurity at using the Hebrew language, and threatening difficulties which stem from a sense of being unsuited to the new academic world especially as being a woman and coming from a minority group. Furthermore, their stories reveal difficulties which derive from gender construction and informal systems of control and supervision initiated by male students in institutions of higher learning. The findings also attest to the practices of resistance, opposition and coping with this complex reality by these young women. (157 words) DOI: 10.5901/mjss.2013.v4n2p143

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