Druze Women and Gender in Druze Society: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
3. Findings
3.1. General Findings
3.2. State of the Theories and Research
3.2.1. Gender and Feminism
3.2.2. Education
3.2.3. Marriage and Family
3.2.4. Economy
3.2.5. Health
3.2.6. Miscellaneous
4. Discussion and Conclusions
5. Future Trajectories
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Running Number | Author | Primary Author Affiliation by Country | Country of Focus | Type of Publication | Discipline | Method | Focuses on the Druze/Compared to Others | Contributing to Theory/Major Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Abbas et al. (2018) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of Adolescent Research) | Sociology | Thematic content analysis on selected interviews: 12 Druze adolescents, six boys, and six girls, age 16–18 | Focuses on the Druze | Adolescent application of Weiner-Levy’s concept of “hybridity”. |
2 | Adwan (2013) | Israel | Israel | Film | Film | Drama movie | Focuses on the Druze | Intermarried man application of Weiner-Levy’s concept of “hybridity”. |
3 | Alamuddin and Starr (1980), chp. 4 | Lebanon, | Lebanon | Book Chapter | Sociology | Analysis of variance on mahr in Lebanese Druze marriage contracts | Focuses on the Druze | Connects marriage to social values |
4 | Amer-Alshiek et al. (2015) | United States | Israel | Article (Israel Journal of Health Policy Research) | Health and Medicine | Statistical analysis on 196 questionnaires distributed by 5 Israeli gynecologists | Focuses on the Druze | Connects religiosity to the preference of obstetricians/gynecologists |
5 | Azzam (2007) | Lebanon | Lebanon | Book | Gender Studies | Statistical analysis on questionnaires and thematic content analysis on interviews | Focuses on the Druze | Comprehensive anthropological account of the Lebanese Druze |
6 | Barakat et al. (2018) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of Research in Gender Studies) | Gender Studies | Feminist narrative approach and semi-structured interviews of 60 Druze women aged 30 to 50 | Focuses on the Druze | Reveals limits of Western Feminist “public/private” binary |
7 | Barakat (2021) | Israel | Israel | Article (Gender Issues) | Gender Studies | Intersectional analysis and semi-structured interviews, 60 Druze women aged 30 to 50 | Focuses on the Druze | Names concealment (istighāba) as resistance to spatial gender prohibitions |
8 | Beaini (1989), chp. 4 | United States | Lebanon | Unpublished MA Thesis | Anthropology | Participant-observation and questionnaires | Focuses on the Druze | Comprehensive anthropological account of Lebanese Druze marriage practices |
9 | Blumen and Halevi (2005) | Israel | Israel | Article (Identities) | Gender Studies | Interviews: 12 Jewish women and 11 Palestinian women | Compared to Others | Druze perspective from within the Women’s Studies classroom |
10 | Blumen and Tzafrir (2011) | Israel | Israel | Article (Cultural Analysis) | Gender Studies | Semi-structured interviews: 22 young Druze female students | Focuses on the Druze | Theorizes gender prohibitions in spatial and temporal frames, one of the critical articles of this literature review’s hypothesis |
11 | Charafeddine (2010) | Lebanon | Lebanon | Article (al-raida) | Sociology | Survey of marriage contracts and selected-sample interviews: 13 Sunnis, 9 Shiites, 4 Druze, 8 Christians | Compared to Others | Provides data on Druze marriage contracts in Lebanon |
12 | Daoud (2006) | United States | Israel | Article (Middle East Report) | Political Science | Interviews of Arab MKs | Compared to Others | Mentions Druze women in politics |
13 | Dayan (2019) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of Interpersonal Violence) | Sociology | Statistical Analysis of data from the Israeli CBS and media surveillance of 58 honor killings cases | Compared to Others | Tracks sociological factors in instances of honor killings |
14 | Di Ricco (2012) | Colombia | Lebanon | Book Chapter | Gender Studies | Interviews with a Druze female activist in Lebanon and a Druze judge | Focuses on the Druze | Overview on Druze women’s activism in Lebanese Personal Status Law |
15 | Florsheim and Gutmann (1992) | United States | Israel | Article (Psychiatry) | Psychology | Unstructured interviews: Druze men aged 35–90 | Focuses on the Druze | One of the sole inquiries into Druze men’s gendered position within the family |
16 | Fournier et al. (2018) | Canada | Lebanon | Book Chapter | Gender Studies/Law | Interviews: Sunni and Shiite Muslims, Druze, Melkite and Maronite Christians, Greek Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox | Compared to Others | Provides feminist perspective for Lebanese debate over religious and secular marriage, elaborates on complexity public/private binary |
17 | Geiger (2013) | Israel | Israel | Article (International Journal of Higher Education) | Education | Interviews: 42 Arab women students, 12 Druze, 22 Muslims, 8 Christians | Compared to Others | Details Druze women’s experience of acculturation within the University, Druze women detailed feelings of alienation |
18 | Golan (2015) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of Psychology and Clinical Psychiatry) | Psychology | Literature Review | Focuses on the Druze | Centers on questions of Druze women’s beauty and health, both undercovered in the field |
19 | Goldblatt and Granot (2006) | Israel | Israel | Article (Women & Health) | Health and Medicine/Gender Studies | Questionnaires: 100 participants at primary care clinics | Focuses on the Druze | Outlines strategies for confronting physical abuse within the patriarchal culture that disincentivizes reporting those instances of abuse |
20 | Halabi (2013) | Lebanon | Lebanon | Book chapter | Law | Personal experience of the author as a former judge and text analysis | Focuses on the Druze | Details the legal status of Druze in Lebanon |
21 | Halabi (2014) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of Asian and African Studies) | Sociology | Qualitative analysis on interviews: 25 male and 25 female Druze university students | Focuses on the Druze | Articulates middle ground between critiques of Druze patriarchy and Western feminism |
22 | Harris (2013) | United States | Israel | Article (Shofar) | Film | Film review | Compared to Others | Sole film analysis included that features Druze women |
23 | Kastrinou (2016) | United Kingdom | Syria | Book Chapter | Anthropology | Interviews and participant observation | Focuses on the Druze | Only analysis of Druze marriage practices in Syria |
24 | Katz (1990) | Israel | Israel | Article (Plural Societies) | Sociology | Questionnaires and personal home interviews | Focuses on the Druze | Notes external familial controls on Druze widows’ economic compensation, reflecting distinguishing between scriptural equality and practical equality |
25 | Khattab (2002) | Israel | Israel | Article (Work, Employment, and Society) | Economics | Statistical analysis | Compared to others | Demystifies culturalist explanation for women’s lack of economic access to the “public sphere.” |
26 | Khoury and Wehbi (2016) | Canada | Lebanon | Article (International Social Work) | Sociology/Gender Studies | Grounded theory methodology and interviews with 24 women | Compared to others | Deconstructs victim/survivor dichotomy in the analysis of women leaving abusive relationships |
27 | Klat and Khudr (1986) | France | Lebanon | Article (Social Biology) | Biology | Statistical analysis | Compared to others | Tracks consanguineous marriages; provides evidence for the extent of Druze endogamy |
28 | Kraus and Yonay (2013) | Israel | Israel | Article (Palestinians in the Israeli Labor Market) | Economics | Statistical analysis of data from the Israeli CBS | Compared to others | Provides statistical economic profile for Druze women over time in comparison to other ethnicities and religions |
29 | Yonay et al. (2014) | Israel | Israel | Article (Sociology) | Economics | Statistical analysis of data from the Israeli CBS | Compared to others | Follows Khattab (2002) in disproving culturalist accounts of Druze women’s economic participation, locates lurking variable in higher heterogeneous levels of financial involvement by Christian economic privilege in Israel |
30 | Kraus and Yonay (2016) | Israel | Israel | Book Chapter | Economics | Statistical analysis of data from the Israeli CBS | Compared to others | Finds more significant public sector advantages for Jewish and Druze women over Muslim and Christian Women, reflecting Druze particularism |
31 | Kraus and Yonay (2018) | Israel | Israel | Book Chapter | Economics | Statistical analysis of data from the Israeli CBS | Focuses on the Druze | A most recent account of Druze women’s economic profile with comparative analysis |
32 | Layish (1978) | Israel | Israel | Article (Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies) | Law | Text analysis | Focuses on the Druze | Details legal specificity of divorce as well as contemporary opinions on the matter |
33 | Layish (1979) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of the American Oriental Society) | Law | Text analysis | Focuses on the Druze | Historicizes Druze ban on polygamy |
34 | Layish (1982) | Israel | Lebanon and Jordan | Book Chapter | Law | Analysis of marriage contract and statistical analysis | Focuses on the Druze | Acknowledges declining presence of equality in marriage laws as well as increasing rates of Druze exogamous marriages |
35 | Mra’ana (2008) | Israel | Israel | Film | Film | Documentary movie | Focuses on the Druze | Demonstrates the prohibitive concept of “honor” in the context of Duah’s attempt to participate in an Israeli Pageant |
36 | Obeid (2006) | Lebanon | Mixed | Book chapter | History | Primary sources | Focuses on the Druze | Explains the equal rights in marriage, divorce, and inheritance of Druze women that contradict Islamic traditions |
37 | Offer and Sabah (2011) | Israel | Israel | Article (Marriage & Family Review) | Economics | Statistical analysis | Compared to Others | Like others, attributes textile factory placement as instrumental in Druze women’s greater economic participation |
38 | Oppenheimer (1980) | Israel | Israel | Article (American Ethnologist) | Anthropology | Literature Review | Focuses on the Druze | A comprehensive anthropological account contextualizes gender roles to reincarnation |
39 | Pullum (2019) | United States | Israel | Article (Anthropology of the Middle East) | Anthropology | Photographic historiography | Focuses on the Druze | Reconsiders historiographic post-Nakba representations emphasizes the joy |
40 | Radwan (2016) | United States | Lebanon | Unpublished Dissertation Chapter | Anthropology | Literature Review | Focuses on the Druze | An exhaustive literature review includes a brief section on women and gender |
41 | Raufman (2018) | Israel | Israel | Article (Marvels and Tales) | Gender Studies | Literature Review | Focuses on the Druze | Details unnamed instance of concealment resistance strategy via the “The Maiden without Hands” tale |
42 | Riklis (2004) | Israel | Israel and Syria | Film | Film | Drama movie | Focuses on the Druze | Allegorizes multiple Druze societal phenomena discussed in the literature |
43 | Saba-Sa’di and Sa’di (2017) | Israel | Israel | Article (Social Identities) | Sociology | Archival documents and in-depth interviews: 35 participants, including 13 Druze women | Focuses on the Druze | Historicizes Druze particularism and its existence within primary and secondary education, implicit feminist analysis |
44 | Sabbah-Karkaby and Stier (2017) | United Kingdom | Israel | Article (Studies in Family Planning) | Sociology | Statistical analysis of data from the Israeli CBS | Compared to others | Provides processed data for marrying age of educated Druze women |
45 | Sasson-Levy (2017) | Israel | Israel | Book Chapter | Sociology | Intersectional analysis | Compared to others | Analyzes Druze men’s military conscription and Druze women’s ban from enlistment from a feminist perspective |
46 | Shamma and Asaqli (2020) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of Educational and Developmental Psychology) | Sociology | An in-depth structured questionnaire: 243 participants aged 15–18, 124 Druze, 119 Jewish | Compared to others | Showcases changes in gender-based attitudes about Druze adolescent girls’ autonomy in decision-making, compared to Jewish girls |
47 | Stier (2013) | Israel | Israel | Book Chapter | Economics | Statistical analysis of data from the Israeli CBS | Compared to others | Correlates greater education and declining fertility rate with Druze women’s economic participation |
48 | Swayd (2009) | United States | Mixed | Book (Encyclopedia guide) | History | Literature review and primary sources | Focuses on the Druze | Names a few influential Druze women in history |
49 | Tarabey (2013) | Lebanon | Lebanon | Book Chapter | Sociology | Comparative study of marriage and divorce rates (1970–2003) | Focuses on the Druze | Tests a variety of factors in instances of Druze marriage and divorce |
50 | Vardi-Saliternik et al. (2002) | Israel | Israel | Article (Annals of Human Biology) | Biology | Structured questionnaire in 1990–1992: 6001 women interviewed, 1529 were “Arab and Druze” | Compared to others | Provides additional data that reflects the degree of Druze endogamy |
51 | Weiner-Levy (2008a) | Israel | Israel | Article (Qualitative Inquiry) | Education | Open-ended questions and interviews: 34 Druze women | Focuses on the Druze | Provides insight on the positionality of the researcher and researched in the context of interviews with Druze women |
52 | Weiner-Levy (2008b) | Israel | Israel | Article (Gender and Education) | Education/Gender Studies | Interviews in 1998–2002: 34 Druze women | Focuses on the Druze | Provides concept of “hybridity” for Druze women attending higher education |
53 | Weiner-Levy (2009) | Israel | Israel | Article (International Journal for Educational Development) | Education/Gender Studies | Interviews in 1998–2002: 34 Druze women | Focuses on the Druze | Details processes of alienation along with the experience of “hybridity” that Druze women experience when attending higher education |
54 | Weiner-Levy (2011) | Israel | Israel | Article (Journal of Family Communication) | Education/Gender Studies | Interviews in 1998–2002: 34 Druze women | Focuses on the Druze | Provides a complex picture of Druze family dynamics, deconstructs culturalist explanation of repressive Arab men |
55 | Yehya and Dutta (2010) | United States | Lebanon | Article (Qualitative Health Research) | Health and Medicine/Gender Studies | Interviews in 2008: 13 women and ten daughters | Focuses on the Druze | Situates notions of “health” in the context of Druze women’s experience |
56 | Zaatut and Haj-Yahia (2016) | Israel | Israel | Article (Feminism and Psychology) | Sociology/Gender Studies | Self-administered questionnaire: 701 married Palestinian women | Compared to others | Comparative analysis of patriarchal attitudes among Druze women regarding wife-beating in contrast to other ethnic and religious groups in Israel further demystifies “women vs. men” culturalist explanation of Arab patriarchy |
1 | The Druze society is generaly comprised of two internally distinct groups: uqqāl are those initiated into the sacred knowledge of the faith, and juhhāl are those uninitiated (Betts 1988). Sometimes they are also referred to as ruhani vs. jismani. Ruhani is for the mashaeikh (Sheikh for singular) who are the uqqāl, those concerned with the physical world as opposed to jismani, who are the juhhāl and are concerned with the body (Ben-Dor 1976). |
2 | |
3 | Taqiyya (“dissimulation” from Arabic) is the practice of: “[…] adoption of outward forms of Sunni Islamic rituals in order to protect the inward faith. The Druze practice of taqiyya is nearly the same sense of the Isma’ili and ‘Alawi principle.” (Firro 2001). |
4 | Hamula is a kinship-based structure in which the extended family playes a central role in many aspects of society, such as the economy, politics, and marraige. Is is organized by lineage of families or a few extended families (Rosenfeld 1974). |
5 | In this context, a mahram is a male relative acting as chaperone who must escort a Druze woman leaving the village. Otherwise she—or her family—might face excommunication or rumors that she violates standards of sexual honor (Barakat et al. 2018). This is observed to various levels in different Druze communities while changes have occurred over the years. |
6 |
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Zeedan, R.; Luce, M. Druze Women and Gender in Druze Society: A Systematic Literature Review. Religions 2021, 12, 1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12121111
Zeedan R, Luce M. Druze Women and Gender in Druze Society: A Systematic Literature Review. Religions. 2021; 12(12):1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12121111
Chicago/Turabian StyleZeedan, Rami, and Miles Luce. 2021. "Druze Women and Gender in Druze Society: A Systematic Literature Review" Religions 12, no. 12: 1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12121111
APA StyleZeedan, R., & Luce, M. (2021). Druze Women and Gender in Druze Society: A Systematic Literature Review. Religions, 12(12), 1111. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12121111