Refereed journal article or data article (A1)
The social control of young women's clothing and bodies: A perspective of differences on racialization and sexualization
List of Authors: Honkatukia P, Keskinen S
Publisher: SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
Publication year: 2018
Journal: Ethnicities
Journal name in source: ETHNICITIES
Journal acronym: ETHNICITIES
Volume number: 18
Issue number: 1
Start page: 142
End page: 161
Number of pages: 20
ISSN: 1468-7968
eISSN: 1741-2706
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468796817701773
URL: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1468796817701773
Abstract
Public discourses and culturalist research often present patriarchal social control as the key element of minority youth's family relations. They focus on conflicts related to young women's sexual reputation when discussing Muslims and nonwestern minorities. Social control is often connected to honor-related violence and applied to assumptions of how young women are oppressed by their family members. In this article, we problematize such a connection and approach social control as a broad phenomenon that shapes social life and is exercised by several actors. The article elaborates a perspective of differences on social control, building on feminist theories of intersectionality, and distinguishing between different dimensions of social control (formal/informal, public/private). This theoretical framework is then applied to the empirical analysis of different elements of social control related to young women's clothing and bodies. It is argued that the framework enables examination of the multifaceted dynamics of gendered, racialized, and age-related social control without falling into the trap of culturalist knowledge production.
Public discourses and culturalist research often present patriarchal social control as the key element of minority youth's family relations. They focus on conflicts related to young women's sexual reputation when discussing Muslims and nonwestern minorities. Social control is often connected to honor-related violence and applied to assumptions of how young women are oppressed by their family members. In this article, we problematize such a connection and approach social control as a broad phenomenon that shapes social life and is exercised by several actors. The article elaborates a perspective of differences on social control, building on feminist theories of intersectionality, and distinguishing between different dimensions of social control (formal/informal, public/private). This theoretical framework is then applied to the empirical analysis of different elements of social control related to young women's clothing and bodies. It is argued that the framework enables examination of the multifaceted dynamics of gendered, racialized, and age-related social control without falling into the trap of culturalist knowledge production.