During my last Cinema & Society class, we had a
conversation on family and family roles, and we had the chance to express our
thoughts and opinions. For this blog, I will discuss that matter and go into
detail as to how it applies to our culture in Doha and the Arabian Gulf in
general.
Traditionally and since we can ever remember, men’s job was to provide financial support for the family, hence their name “breadwinners”. Women, on the other hand, were responsible for taking care of the house, the kids, and ensuring it all went well. This is how women earned the name “homemakers”. All this goes back to our existing views and ideas about gender and who we believe is supposed to do what.
Traditionally and since we can ever remember, men’s job was to provide financial support for the family, hence their name “breadwinners”. Women, on the other hand, were responsible for taking care of the house, the kids, and ensuring it all went well. This is how women earned the name “homemakers”. All this goes back to our existing views and ideas about gender and who we believe is supposed to do what.
The way all this applies to Doha is that during the last century and for the most part, men and women both assumed their traditional family roles, with men being the “breadwinners” and women being the “homemakers”. However, contrary to popular belief, men and women have mostly been breadwinners and homemakers simply because we decided to arrange things in such a way, not because it is the right and only way to go.
Nowadays in Doha and
in the Gulf, the number of working women has increased. Sometimes, this is the
case because the “bread” earned by the father isn’t enough to cover for all the
expenses and financial needs of the family. At other times, this is because of
another relatively recent phenomenon, which is that nowadays more and more
women are taking more interest in completing an undergraduate study after
completing high school. By going to work and earning their own money, they feel
more powerful and worth more than if they just stayed at home and took care of
the kids. Although I am a personal believer in that some things women do at
home, such as taking care of their children, are of great importance, the reason
they and most of society do not see it this way is because, as David Grazian
said in his book Mix It Up, “non-economic activity is devalued in today’s
modern capitalist society”. Perhaps another reason that would cause a woman to
go to work in this part of the world is if her children have all grown up, and
so she basically has nothing to do at home and decides to go work to spend her
time doing something useful.
Before ending this blog, I decided to conclude with a few
useful tips for those of you who are already married or do plan to get married
someday. First, Grazian mentions a study that observed that women’s stress
levels go down when their husbands help them with the housework. Grazian also
stated that another study concluded that women who work are happier than those
who are homemakers, which might make you re-think letting your wife go to work.
That’s all for today.
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