scholarly journals The Influence of Modernist Discourse on Lower Class Women between the West and The East: A Comparative Study

Author(s):  
Mohamed Abdulhasan Jasm Bahadlkhafaja ◽  

This study is intended to show how the impact of discourse of modernism has made remarkable changes in women’s status in patriarchal societies in the first decades if the twentieth century. Comparatively reading F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (1925) and Naguib Mahfouz’s Zuqāq al-Midaq (1947) [Midaq Alley (1966)], this paper endeavours to contrast and compare women’s status both in the western and eastern societies after the two world wars; as women’s struggle against patriarchy and its oppressive practices imposed on women was one of the most critical concerns of the time. The American school of comparative literature, particularly the theories put forward by Rene Wellek and Abda Abood, along with Western and Eastern feminist theories of Simone De Beauvoir’s, Christine Delphy, Nawal El Saadawi and Qasim Amin are employed as the theoretical framework of this paper. The observation to emerge from this paper is that women’s social and economic status has been vital to their perpetual oppression.

1992 ◽  
Vol 66 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 89-94
Author(s):  
María Isabel Quiñones-Arocho

[First paragraph]The women of Azua: work and family in the rural Dominican Republic, by BARBARA FINLAY. New York: Praeger, 1989. xi + 190 pp. (Cloth US$ 35.00)The psychosocial development of Puerto Rican women, edited by CYNTHIA T. GARCIA COLL & MARIA DE LOURDES MATTEI. New York: Praeger, 1989. xiii + 272 pp. (Cloth US$ 45.00)Women and the sexual division oflabour in the Caribbean, edited by KEITH HART. Mona, Jamaica: Consortium Graduate School of Social Sciences, UWI, 1989. 141 pp. (Paper n.p.)The three books under review work have a common theme: the impact of changing gender expectations on Caribbean women. The authors are mainly concerned with recent political and economie changes that might have contributed to either the improvement or deterioration of women's status in these societies. The questions raised by the contributors are strikingly similar: What has been the impact of dependent economie development on women's lives and has this resulted in increased labor participation (a problem explored for rural Dominican women as well as for Jamaican and Barbadian women) or in the migration to metropolitan centers, with its psychosocial consequences (an issue raised for Puerto Rican women living in the United States)? If patriarchal values (often referred to as traditional values) prevail in these societies, then what impact might wage work, migration, or improved education have on those values? Could it be the disintegration of the nuclear family with an increased proportion of female-headed households (Hart), higher rates of mental illness as a result of dysfunctional aceulturation (Garcia Coll and Mattei), or even an improvement of women's status within their families and communities (Finlay)?


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 973-973
Author(s):  
Nadia Diamond-Smith ◽  
Mahesh Puri ◽  
Sheri Weiser ◽  
John Neuhaus

Abstract Objectives Gender norms in South Asia often lead women, especially younger newly married women, to eat last in the household, not eat enough food and/or have poor diet quality. Low BMI and poor nutritional intake among preconception and pregnant women, and subsequent adverse birth and growth outcomes, are still common. We hypothesize that factors that increase women's status in the household, including becoming pregnant, giving birth, being in school and paid work, might lead to improvements in food consumption and quality. This should especially be true for pregnancy and childbirth given decades of programs and policies aiming to improve nutrition pre-pregnancy. Our objective is to explore how the change in four factors associated with women's status are associated with changes in newly married women's eating practices. Methods We collected 4 rounds of panel data over 18 months from 200 newly married women (married in the last 3 months) living in 2 municipalities of Nepal in 2018–2019. Using mixed effects models, we explored the impact of (1) becoming pregnant, (2) giving birth, (3) being in school and (4) paid work outside the home, on women reporting that she ate last in the household always/most of the time; ate 3 or more meals a day; ate iron rich foods all/most days; and a higher dietary diversity. Results Controlling for other socio-economic demographics, pregnancy or giving birth was not associated with improvement in any eating practices. An individual woman starting to work outside the home was associated with her having a lower odds of eating last. A woman dropping out of school was associated with a reduced odds of eating iron rich foods most days and eating 3 + meals a day. Conclusions Programs and policies aiming to improve women's access to high quality and quantity of food when they become pregnant or give birth do not seem to be leading to desired improvements in this setting—other approaches are needed to encourage families to give high-risk women more and higher quality food. Other factors associated with women's status and empowerment do appear to increase women's access to food and nutrition related resources. Families thus appear to value investing in women when they are contributing to household resources or appear to have future potential to do so, which may contribute to higher negotiating power for women. Funding Sources National Institute of Child Health and Development.


2014 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 244-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clara Mallier

This article deals with Emile Benveniste’s theory of enunciation (see ‘Subjectivity in Language’ and ‘The Correlations of Tense in the French Verb’ in Problems in General Linguistics, 1971 [1966] and ‘L’appareil formel de l’énonciation’ in Problèmes de linguistique générale, tome 2, 1970), in particular his distinction between historical narration and discourse, and the way it applies to the translation of first-person fiction. In French narratives, the main tense of discourse is the passé composé, which is related to the time of enunciation, while the tense of historical narration is traditionally the passé simple, which is related to the moment of the events reported. The passé composé thus draws attention to the narrating I’s retrospective gaze, while the passé simple reflects the experiencing I’s perspective within the story. This raises complex issues of translation because the narrative use of the passé composé has no equivalent in English, so that the distinction between the perspectives of the retrospective narrator and of his former self are expressed differently in the two languages. This article explores the impact of this phenomenon on four different French translations of Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (Llona, 1926; Tournier, 1996; Wolkenstein, 2011 and Jaworski, 2012).


1970 ◽  
pp. 20-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sohpie Richter-Devroe

The 1993 Oslo Accords between the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) and the Israeli government have had a profound impact on the whole of Palestinian society; more particularly, they strongly influenced the development of the Palestinian women’s movement. This paper will portray different forms of women’s activism after Oslo; it will research the impact of peaceful female activism,feminist activism and militant female activism on women’s status in society.


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