Control and Subversion investigates the relationship of gender to the inner workings of social control, such as exposing ways in which post-Soviet Tajikistan society threatens men's masculinity, thereby bringing them to force family members into conformity, irrespective of the suffering this may cause. Told through ethnographically collected life histories, the book examines how masculine and feminine gender characteristics influence personal relationships and explores gender relations at their most intimate - from the secret musings of adolescent girls, through the painful experiences of young men, to the trauma of sexual initiation. Although largely concentrating on contemporary life, the book also discusses historical materials and Soviet influence on Tajik society. Control and Subversion is essential reading for anyone interested in Central Asia, Muslim societies, the lives of Muslim women, or gender in a Muslim context.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Acknowledgements Dramatis Personae Technical Information and Terminology Glossary Introduction: The Research Setting and Methodology 1. Conceptual Background 2. The Bolsheviks Attack but the Tajiks Resist 3. Community Control 4. Inter-Generational Family Control 5. The Individual Unmasked 6. The Couple Relationship: Love, Sex and Marriage 7. Control and Subversion Bibliography