Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Arab Women and Education :: Family Identity Essays
Arab Women and pedagogicsWhether it was the impoverished desert village, the war torn hills of Beirut, affluent Barqais, the jet designate in London and Paris, or the enclosed lives of women in a serail in Morocco, the female characters in these novels all shared five parking area threads that dealt with the family and the search for identity. In my reading of five novels about Arab women from backgrounds and in situations as diverse as I thought possible, I was impress to find this common thread running through ever soy baste of literature. In this paper, I will analyze the role the womens families get hold of in the upbringing of the women, the role of women and families in the literature in political support and times of war, womens health and family planning, and most of all what these issues do to the emerging identity of the Arab woman. In a society that is so lie around the extended family, and in which elderly parents are rarely if ever sent to nursing homes, the fa milys opinion weighs heavily on what a woman can and cannot do with her life. The examination of the manner in which education is regarded in the families of these women is critical for a better understanding of the decisions they make. In a traditionally patriarchal society where the man is the breadwinner, the assessment of the subject of motion outside the home is also interesting. In a region so riddled with almost constant political and military upheaval, there has been reflect to have been a change in the roles women in the family play in support of these political and military actions. Finally, the issue of identity is much more than prominent in the more modern novels and the issue of the modern family versus the individual and the rise of the individual from the modern family plays very prominently in In the Eye of the Sun and Dreams of Trespass. The Arab family, as Magida Salman writes, is where the fate of women is being resolved and unfolds (Salman 7). Therefore, it is necessary to understand the huge impact the family has on the identity of Arab women. identicalness as a concept is valuable as a mall for cross-cultural understandings of human experience because it begins with the individual, and issues of identity in a literary context can act as a mirror for what is occurrence in the real world.
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