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October 23, 2009
Triger: "The Gendered Racial Formation: Foreign Men, 'Our' Women, and the Law"
Zvi H. Triger (The College of Management School of Law) has posted The Gendered Racial Formation: Foreign Men, "Our" Women, and the Law, 30 Women's Rights Law Reporter__ (2009), on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This article analyses the paradox relating to the tension between
cultural perceptions and legal norms. Throughout history, countless
nations have instituted limitations on marriage and prohibitions on
intermarriage. While many of these prohibitions were, for the most
part, gender neutral, meaning that both men and women members of the
community were barred from marriage outside the community, cultural
norms have treated women marrying foreign men less forgivingly than the
opposite case. Using historical sources and ancient texts on
intermarriage and sexuality, the article argues that the discrepancy
between law
and culture is to be found in the early Judeo-Christian tradition,
which attributed the foreign male with unquenchable sexual prowess
while not perceiving the foreign female in the same vein. As the
article argues, this was due to a patriarchal worldview which promoted
close scrutiny of and control over women's sexuality. Patriarchy, then,
led to the development of a cultural taboo on local women marrying
foreign men while ignoring the case of men marrying foreign women,
despite the gender neutrality of the initial ban.
MR
October 23, 2009 | Permalink
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