Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in Middle East women’s life writings
Middle East women life writings have been downplayed for their oversimplified representations of female subjects as purely passive, submissive and unresisting. This article explores the allegation in three contemporary memoirs by Jean P. Sasson (1992) (the ghostwriter of Saudi princess Sultana), Z...
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my-ukm.journal.128962019-05-12T21:49:56Z http://journalarticle.ukm.my/12896/ Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in Middle East women’s life writings Asl, Moussa Pourya Middle East women life writings have been downplayed for their oversimplified representations of female subjects as purely passive, submissive and unresisting. This article explores the allegation in three contemporary memoirs by Jean P. Sasson (1992) (the ghostwriter of Saudi princess Sultana), Zainab Salbi (2005) and Manal al-Sharif (2017) who recount similar observations on subordinated women’s daily experiences in phallocentric Arab communities, and whose stories have similarly been the subject of much controversial criticism. In the present study, I aim to examine the practices exercised by marginalized Arab women to destabilize the patriarchal status quo and redefine the established ways of being. To do so, I draw on Michel Foucault’s notion of counter-conduct, often associated with the issues of women and their socio-political and religious position, to identify acts of defiance that are exercised simultaneously with strategies of governmentality through practices of moral self-reflection, or what Foucault describes as the art of being governed differently. The article concludes that in creatively documenting their life stories and through tactical elements such as counter-history, counter-society and reversed obedience, the so-called passive women interrogate the totality of prevailing hierarchies of power, and resist against the unequal society as well as the operating practices of subjugation. Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2018 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://journalarticle.ukm.my/12896/1/21719-78379-1-PB.pdf Asl, Moussa Pourya (2018) Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in Middle East women’s life writings. 3L; Language,Linguistics and Literature,The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies., 24 (2). pp. 194-205. ISSN 0128-5157 http://ejournal.ukm.my/3l/issue/view/1096 |
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Middle East women life writings have been downplayed for their oversimplified representations of female
subjects as purely passive, submissive and unresisting. This article explores the allegation in three
contemporary memoirs by Jean P. Sasson (1992) (the ghostwriter of Saudi princess Sultana), Zainab Salbi
(2005) and Manal al-Sharif (2017) who recount similar observations on subordinated women’s daily
experiences in phallocentric Arab communities, and whose stories have similarly been the subject of much
controversial criticism. In the present study, I aim to examine the practices exercised by marginalized Arab
women to destabilize the patriarchal status quo and redefine the established ways of being. To do so, I draw on
Michel Foucault’s notion of counter-conduct, often associated with the issues of women and their socio-political
and religious position, to identify acts of defiance that are exercised simultaneously with strategies of
governmentality through practices of moral self-reflection, or what Foucault describes as the art of being
governed differently. The article concludes that in creatively documenting their life stories and through tactical
elements such as counter-history, counter-society and reversed obedience, the so-called passive women
interrogate the totality of prevailing hierarchies of power, and resist against the unequal society as well as the
operating practices of subjugation. |
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Article |
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Asl, Moussa Pourya |
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Asl, Moussa Pourya Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in Middle East women’s life writings |
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Asl, Moussa Pourya |
author_sort |
Asl, Moussa Pourya |
title |
Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in
Middle East women’s life writings |
title_short |
Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in
Middle East women’s life writings |
title_full |
Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in
Middle East women’s life writings |
title_fullStr |
Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in
Middle East women’s life writings |
title_full_unstemmed |
Practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in
Middle East women’s life writings |
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practices of counter-conduct as a mode of resistance in
middle east women’s life writings |
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Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia |
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2018 |
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http://journalarticle.ukm.my/12896/1/21719-78379-1-PB.pdf http://journalarticle.ukm.my/12896/ http://ejournal.ukm.my/3l/issue/view/1096 |
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