Gender on the Market: Moroccan Women and the Revoicing of TraditionSelected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Book for 1996 Gender on the Market is a study of Moroccan women's expressive culture and the ways in which it both determines and responds to current transformations in gender roles. Beginning with women's emergence into what has been defined as the most paradigmatic of Moroccan male institutions--the marketplace--the book elucidates how gender and commodity relations are experienced and interpreted in women's aesthetic practices. Deborah Kapchan compellingly demonstrates that Moroccan women challenge some of the most basic cultural assumptions of their society--especially ones concerning power and authority. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 46
Page 4
... status , or gender . As repositories of history and tradition , speech genres are often sites of contest , arenas for the discursive recon- struction of identity , intertextual fields where competing tropes battle for metonymic ...
... status , or gender . As repositories of history and tradition , speech genres are often sites of contest , arenas for the discursive recon- struction of identity , intertextual fields where competing tropes battle for metonymic ...
Page 13
... status achieved by merely waiting in line for the telephone objectifies the consumer who displays her- or himself on the street . Although there is severe unemployment , especially among the edu- cated , the changes in consumption and ...
... status achieved by merely waiting in line for the telephone objectifies the consumer who displays her- or himself on the street . Although there is severe unemployment , especially among the edu- cated , the changes in consumption and ...
Page 14
... status . Many working women simply do not have the time to spend at the bath , for the ḥammam is a ritualistic process that involves moving from the hot to the warm to the cool room several times in succession , scrubbing , rinsing off ...
... status . Many working women simply do not have the time to spend at the bath , for the ḥammam is a ritualistic process that involves moving from the hot to the warm to the cool room several times in succession , scrubbing , rinsing off ...
Page 15
... large part of the population take to the main boulevard after sundown to prome- nade and display themselves . Young mothers push the newest status com- modity , the stroller , walking with either girlfriends or Introduction 15.
... large part of the population take to the main boulevard after sundown to prome- nade and display themselves . Young mothers push the newest status com- modity , the stroller , walking with either girlfriends or Introduction 15.
Page 16
... status as commodities ( though not always as controlling commodities ) and their new patterns of work and consumption are impelling changes in all spheres of society . These roles imply changing genres which encode new relations of ...
... status as commodities ( though not always as controlling commodities ) and their new patterns of work and consumption are impelling changes in all spheres of society . These roles imply changing genres which encode new relations of ...
Contents
In the Place of the Market | 29 |
Shtara Competence in Cleverness | 50 |
Words of Possession Possession of Words The Majduba | 72 |
Words About Herbs Feminine Performance of Oratory in the Marketplace | 103 |
Reporting the New Revoicing the Past Marketplace Oratory and the Carnivalesque | 138 |
Gender on the Market | 151 |
Women on the Market The Subversive Bride | 153 |
Catering to the Sexual Market Female Performers Defining the Social Body | 181 |
Terms of Talking Back Womens Discourse on Magic | 235 |
Conclusion Hybridization and the Marketplace | 275 |
Discourse of the Majduba | 280 |
Discourse of the Ashshaba | 290 |
Glossary | 297 |
299 | |
321 | |
323 | |
Other editions - View all
Gender on the Market: Moroccan Women and the Revoicing of Tradition Deborah Kapchan Limited preview - 2010 |
Gender on the Market: Moroccan Women and the Revoicing of Tradition Deborah Anne Kapchan No preview available - 1996 |
Common terms and phrases
Aisha allah audience Bakhtin baraka bargaining Bauman becomes Beni Mellal Berber blessing body boundaries bride Cambridge Casablanca classical Arabic client cloth commodity context culture da'wa dialogue discourse domain dyal embodies expressive Fadela Fatna female feminine festive fitna folklore fqih gender genres give going gold gossip hadith halqa harmal herbalist herbs here's ḥənna honor husband hybrid Islam l-mra lalla language linguistic llah magic maid majduba male marketplace marketplace oratory Mellal mən Moroccan Arabic Morocco mother mother-in-law Moulay Ibrahim Muslim nafs narrative nǝggafa niya performance political practices prix fixe Prophet Qur'an realm relations religious reported speech revoicing ritual riyals role sell sexual shikhat social society someone status symbolic talk tell tion told tqaf traditional University of Pennsylvania University Press verbal voice wajib wedding Whoever woman vendor women words Yeah York Zohra
Popular passages
Page 17 - These images of agency are increasingly distortions of a world of merchandising so subtle that the consumer is consistently helped to believe that he or she is an actor, where in fact he or she is at best a chooser.
Page 27 - Barthes ironically invites us to imagine someone (a kind of Monsieur Teste in reverse) who abolishes within himself all barriers, all classes, all exclusions, not by syncretism but by simple discard of that old specter: logical contradiction: who mixes every language, even those said to be incompatible...