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Constructing the authority of women through custom: Bulak village, Kyrgyzstan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2018

Aksana Ismailbekova*
Affiliation:
Crossroads Asia, Zentrum Moderner Orient (ZMO), Berlin, Germany
*
Email: [email protected]

Abstract

The traditional authority of Kyrgyz women operates within moral frameworks and through their roles as keepers of hearth and home, and has been recognized by the state for its important role in family life and in society. Women are responsible for the health of future generations, for the quality of children's education, and for safeguarding and passing on moral principles, which contribute to the formation of the traditional Kyrgyz family, and thus to the Kyrgyz nation. Kyrgyz ideas that women are keepers of hearth and home are exactly the ideas that allow women to build authority within the home and family. Not only do Kyrgyz women actually gain a great deal of power in their families over the course of their lives, but also this female power is foundational to the Kyrgyz sense of nation and sovereignty. Thus, what seems to be “domestic” power is, in fact, power with very public connections and effects.

Type
Special Section: Gender and Nation in Post Soviet Central Asia
Copyright
Copyright © 2016 Association for the Study of Nationalities 

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