Abstract
The paper traces Palestinian women’s understandings, practices and framings of everyday resistance. Women’s resistance acts consist of both materially-based survival strategies and various coping strategies at the ideational level. Focusing on the latter, this study investigates women’s practices of travelling to create (a sense of) normal joyful life for themselves, their families, friends and community with the aim of shedding light upon the complex and mutually constitutive interplay between women’s agency and the various social and political power structures. It is argued that Palestinian women, although framing their acts of crossing Israeli-imposed physical restriction as acts of resistance against the occupation, are in fact also seizing an opportunity to covertly challenge and trespass internal patriarchal forms of control.
Recommended Citation
Richter-Devroe, Sophie
(2013)
"Palestinian Women’s Everyday Resistance: Between Normality and Normalisation,"
Journal of International Women's Studies: Vol. 12:
Iss.
2, Article 4.
Available at:
https://vc.bridgew.edu/jiws/vol12/iss2/4