Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1546Hits:18320121Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID162789
Title ProperGifts and Kinship: Women as Men’s Signs in ʿArus-e Ātash
LanguageENG
AuthorSadeghi Kahmini, Mostafa
Summary / Abstract (Note)This essay investigates the Iranian film ʿArus-e Ātash, directed by Khosrow Sināʾi in 1999, through the lens of gender studies. In doing so, it employs Claude Lévi-Strauss’ theory of kinship and elementary structures in order to create a context for the social structure of ʿashira as the prevailing unit of society among Khuzestāni Arabs of Iran. The significance of gift exchange as the predominant form of making alliances, as well as the position of women as the nucleus of these exchanges, is further discussed to shed light on the different socialization of male and female individuals in the ʿashira. Using Lévi-Strauss’ ideas in conjunction with the gender feminism of Kate Millett and Catharine A. MacKinnon, the study explores how women in primitive societies have the dual function of being the men’s property on an objective level as well as the means for alliance-making on a subjective one—a sign and a value at the same time. The essay concludes that men can also be considered as the victims of the patriarchal system since it creates a cultural image of men imbued with excessive masculinity that they may not be able live up to.
`In' analytical NoteIranian Studies Vol. 51, No.6; Nov 2018: p.961-977
Journal SourceIranian Studies Vol: 51 No 6
Key WordsGender ;  Gift Exchange ;  Iranian Cinema ;  Kinship ;  Female Identity ;  Ashira ;  Arus-e Ātash