"Gender and Violence in the Middle East" argues that violence is
fundamental to the functioning of the patriarchal gender structure
that governs daily life in Middle Eastern societies. Ghanim
contends that the inherent violence of gender relations in the
Middle East feeds the authoritarianism and political violence that
plague public life in the region. In this societal sense, men as
well as women may be said to be victims of the structural violence
inherent in Middle Eastern gender relations. The author shows that
the varieties of physical violence against women for which the
Middle East is notorious--honor killings, obligatory beatings,
female genital mutilation--are merely eruptions of an ethos of
psychological violence and the threat of physical violence that
pervades gender relations in the Middle East.
Ghanim documents and analyzes the complementary roles of both
sexes in sustaining the system of violence and oppressive control
that regulates gender relations in Middle Eastern societies. He
reveals that women are not only victims of violence but welcome the
opportunity to become perpetrators of violence in the married
female life cycle of subordination followed by domination. The
mother-in-law plays a crucial role in supporting the structure of
patriarchal control by stoking tensions with her daughter-in-law
and provoking her son to commit sanctioned violence on his wife.
The author applies his deep analysis of gender and violence in the
Middle East to illuminate the motivational profiles of male and
female political suicidalists from the Middle East and the
martyrological adulation that they are accorded in Middle Eastern
societies.
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