I Prefer a World without Men: A Study of Language, Gender and Power in Women Writers of South Asia

Authors

  • Zainab Akram
  • Naheed Qasim
  • Hajira Masroor
  • Shehnaz Mehboob

Abstract

This essay investigates the multiple issues of feminism’s combat with the triple P’s, phallocentric disposition, patriarchal authority, and the paterfamilias. Researchers propose to apply the Theory of Community of Practice to the feminism writings by selecting three short stories of female writers. Researcher’s primary text includes Banana Yoshimoto’s Newlywed from Japan; Ding Ling’s When I was in Xia village from China and Krys Lee’s Temporary Marriage from Korea. After analyzing the domain of language, power and gender and also exploring the community of practice theory, Researcher dig out that the three aspects in researcher research area overlap and complement each other. The gender or the community in general contributes the other gender to accept its practices. The negligence, rebel or protest result in personal isolation and rebuke from society in general. But, exceptions do arise and mark themselves according to their capacity. A remedy is possible when all the lingering threads of language, power and gender and community practices are knitted in a harmonized pattern of social and linguistic applications.

DOI: 10.5901/jesr.2015.v5n2p223

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Published

2015-05-07

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

I Prefer a World without Men: A Study of Language, Gender and Power in Women Writers of South Asia. (2015). Journal of Educational and Social Research, 5(2), 223. https://www.richtmann.org/journal/index.php/jesr/article/view/6579