male gender and rituals of resistance in the Palestinian intifada: a cultural politics of violence
- 1 February 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Ethnologist
- Vol. 21 (1) , 31-49
- https://doi.org/10.1525/ae.1994.21.1.02a00020
Abstract
This article examines ritualized inscriptions of bodily violence upon Palestinian male youths in the occupied territories. It argues that beatings and detention are construed as rites of passage into manhood. Bodily violence is crucial in the construction of a moral self among its recipients, who are enabled to juxtapose their own cultural categories of manhood and morality to those of a foreign power. Ritual as a transformative experience foregrounds a political agency designed to reverse relations of domination between occupied and occupier. Simultaneously, it both reaffirms and transforms internal Palestinian forms of domination. [Middle East, masculinity, ritual performance, violence, body, construction of self]Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- American Jews and Palestine: The Impact of the Gulf WarMiddle East Report, 1992
- Tactility and DistractionCultural Anthropology, 1991
- Violence and Resistance in the Americas: The Legacy of ConquestJournal of Historical Sociology, 1990
- Palestine for BeginnersMiddle East Report, 1988
- performing passions: aesthetics and politics in an occasionally egalitarian communityAmerican Ethnologist, 1987
- the madman and the migrant: work and labor in the historical consciousness of a South African peopleAmerican Ethnologist, 1987
- Socio-Political Integration and Conflict Resolution in the Palestinian Camps in LebanonJournal of Palestine Studies, 1987
- performance and the cultural construction of realityAmerican Ethnologist, 1985
- The Poetic Construction of SelfAnthropological Quarterly, 1985
- Kwaio Women Speak: The Micropolitics of Autobiography in a Solomon Island SocietyAmerican Anthropologist, 1985