In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel

High among the mountains and olive groves of Israel's Western Galilee, a group of Palestinian women regularly meet to do something unexpected. They play soccer. In Israel. Banat Sakhnin is the only Palestinian women's soccer team in the Israeli league. T...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stewart, Kenda Ranee
Other Authors: Domínguez, Virginia R.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2991
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3138&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-31382019-10-13T04:49:10Z In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel Stewart, Kenda Ranee High among the mountains and olive groves of Israel's Western Galilee, a group of Palestinian women regularly meet to do something unexpected. They play soccer. In Israel. Banat Sakhnin is the only Palestinian women's soccer team in the Israeli league. The players, coaches, and manager are Israeli citizens, but represent a minority within the Jewish state. As such, the women who play for Banat Sakhnin face challenges from multiple sides. This dissertation argues that Palestinian women's access to soccer in Israel is intimately tied to complex and contradictory community and national ideas about Palestinian-ness. Women's participation in an overtly physical activity puts their bodies on public display to be symbolically constituted as versions of "Palestinians," "Israelis," or an amalgamation of both. Additionally, soccer's reputation as a male sport in Israel further complicates women's access to it as players or as fans. This dissertation is based on intensive field research conducted from January 2006-December 2007. The interviews, stories, archival research, newspaper articles, and personal experience I collected revealed a complex picture of what life might be like for young Palestinian women who play soccer in Israel. I found that soccer players face limitations placed upon them by their coach and manager in the form of protectiveness and monitoring of their "propriety." I found that they face limitations from their families and communities who view soccer as a "hobby" that should end when the players marry. The team itself faces financial difficulties, because of a lack of popular interest in women's soccer, and a lack of commitment by the governing bodies of soccer in Israel. Yet, the players are not fully passive, and find ways to pursue their own goals around these structural and cultural limitations. This research contributes to the anthropology of women and power in the Middle East and the sociology and anthropology of soccer. Scholarship on women's soccer in the Middle East has focused on women's role in Islam. I suggest that this focus overshadows other gendered, cultural, and political barriers faced by women in Middle Eastern countries. The story of Banat Sakhnin adds to research about women's lives in the Middle East and Israel, because it focuses on female athletes playing a sport perceived to belong to the realm of men. It explores the ways in which the players' transgression of this gendered norm shapes and transforms other kinds of ideas about "Palestinian-ness" and "womanhood" in Israel. 2012-05-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2991 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3138&context=etd Copyright 2012 Kenda Stewart Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaDomínguez, Virginia R. Chibnik, Michael, 1946- football gender Israel Palestinians soccer women Anthropology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic football
gender
Israel
Palestinians
soccer
women
Anthropology
spellingShingle football
gender
Israel
Palestinians
soccer
women
Anthropology
Stewart, Kenda Ranee
In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel
description High among the mountains and olive groves of Israel's Western Galilee, a group of Palestinian women regularly meet to do something unexpected. They play soccer. In Israel. Banat Sakhnin is the only Palestinian women's soccer team in the Israeli league. The players, coaches, and manager are Israeli citizens, but represent a minority within the Jewish state. As such, the women who play for Banat Sakhnin face challenges from multiple sides. This dissertation argues that Palestinian women's access to soccer in Israel is intimately tied to complex and contradictory community and national ideas about Palestinian-ness. Women's participation in an overtly physical activity puts their bodies on public display to be symbolically constituted as versions of "Palestinians," "Israelis," or an amalgamation of both. Additionally, soccer's reputation as a male sport in Israel further complicates women's access to it as players or as fans. This dissertation is based on intensive field research conducted from January 2006-December 2007. The interviews, stories, archival research, newspaper articles, and personal experience I collected revealed a complex picture of what life might be like for young Palestinian women who play soccer in Israel. I found that soccer players face limitations placed upon them by their coach and manager in the form of protectiveness and monitoring of their "propriety." I found that they face limitations from their families and communities who view soccer as a "hobby" that should end when the players marry. The team itself faces financial difficulties, because of a lack of popular interest in women's soccer, and a lack of commitment by the governing bodies of soccer in Israel. Yet, the players are not fully passive, and find ways to pursue their own goals around these structural and cultural limitations. This research contributes to the anthropology of women and power in the Middle East and the sociology and anthropology of soccer. Scholarship on women's soccer in the Middle East has focused on women's role in Islam. I suggest that this focus overshadows other gendered, cultural, and political barriers faced by women in Middle Eastern countries. The story of Banat Sakhnin adds to research about women's lives in the Middle East and Israel, because it focuses on female athletes playing a sport perceived to belong to the realm of men. It explores the ways in which the players' transgression of this gendered norm shapes and transforms other kinds of ideas about "Palestinian-ness" and "womanhood" in Israel.
author2 Domínguez, Virginia R.
author_facet Domínguez, Virginia R.
Stewart, Kenda Ranee
author Stewart, Kenda Ranee
author_sort Stewart, Kenda Ranee
title In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel
title_short In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel
title_full In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel
title_fullStr In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel
title_full_unstemmed In or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of Palestinian women's soccer in Israel
title_sort in or out of bounds?: the cultural and political implications of palestinian women's soccer in israel
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2012
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/2991
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3138&context=etd
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