Book

Gender in crisis: women and the Palestinian resistance movement

Columbia University PressNew York • Published In 1991 • Pages:

By: Peteet, Julie Marie.

Abstract
This is a history of Palestinian women's political activism. Peteet looks at both the pre-1948 women's movement and the post-1948 movement in Lebanon where she did her fieldwork. Peteet is interested in the relationship between the women's movement and the national movement, political consciousnesss and feminist consciousness, political activism and gender relations. How has the Resistance mobilized women and how has it impacted on traditional division of labor and gender ideology? She interviews a variety of women involved in the movement, even if only peripherally, including those women who are university educated, illiterate, single, married, widowed, well-off, poor, mothers of two children, mothers of eight children. She concludes that while the Resistance awakened women to a feminist consciousness, their struggle for gender equality and rights within the movement has been constrained by the larger struggle for national self-determination.
Subjects
Gender status
External relations
Political movements
Revolution
Aftermath of combat
Private welfare agencies
Ethnosociology
culture
Palestinians
HRAF PubDate
2005
Region
Middle East
Sub Region
Middle East
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 2004
Field Date
1980-1982
Coverage Date
1948-1984
Coverage Place
Lebanon
Notes
by Julie M. Peteet
Includes bibliographical references (p. 231-238) and index
LCCN
90025824
LCSH
Palestinian Arabs