Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls

This paper examines the meanings attached to sexuality and femininity by Minangkabau teenage girls in schools in West Sumatra, Indonesia. Schools in West Sumatra communicate a hegemonic, normative understanding of womanhood, and a moral consciousness of the female sexual body, to students. Different...

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Main Author: Lyn Parker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BRILL 2009-05-01
Series:Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.kitlv-journals.nl/index.php/btlv/article/view/3627
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spelling doaj-ce141ae465074dcc91b6a8452ed879b12021-04-02T06:43:39ZengBRILLBijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde0006-22942009-05-0116516294Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girlsLyn ParkerThis paper examines the meanings attached to sexuality and femininity by Minangkabau teenage girls in schools in West Sumatra, Indonesia. Schools in West Sumatra communicate a hegemonic, normative understanding of womanhood, and a moral consciousness of the female sexual body, to students. Different types of schools – academic, vocational and Islamic senior high schools – have a different ‘curriculum of the body’ (Lesko 1988) and differently discipline bodies and shape sexuality. School girls articulate their understanding of and practise their sexuality in ways that are characteristic of their class, gender and religiosity, mediated by their schools.
 The schools articulate a religiously-ordained and gendered social order, and impose social control. The different types of school render girls chaste and virtuous to varying degrees. Through everyday practices, this curriculum effects girls’ embodied experience of sexuality. Minangkabau teenage girls have a highly developed sense of their own sexuality, but, far from experiencing a sexual revolution as a result of globalization, most have developed a sexual awareness that is weighted with cultural and religious burdens. Minang female adolescent sexuality is a moral sexuality based on Islam and <i>adat</i>.http://www.kitlv-journals.nl/index.php/btlv/article/view/3627Minangkabausexualityreligioneducation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lyn Parker
spellingShingle Lyn Parker
Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls
Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde
Minangkabau
sexuality
religion
education
author_facet Lyn Parker
author_sort Lyn Parker
title Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls
title_short Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls
title_full Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls
title_fullStr Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls
title_full_unstemmed Religion, class and schooled sexuality among Minangkabau teenage girls
title_sort religion, class and schooled sexuality among minangkabau teenage girls
publisher BRILL
series Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde
issn 0006-2294
publishDate 2009-05-01
description This paper examines the meanings attached to sexuality and femininity by Minangkabau teenage girls in schools in West Sumatra, Indonesia. Schools in West Sumatra communicate a hegemonic, normative understanding of womanhood, and a moral consciousness of the female sexual body, to students. Different types of schools – academic, vocational and Islamic senior high schools – have a different ‘curriculum of the body’ (Lesko 1988) and differently discipline bodies and shape sexuality. School girls articulate their understanding of and practise their sexuality in ways that are characteristic of their class, gender and religiosity, mediated by their schools.
 The schools articulate a religiously-ordained and gendered social order, and impose social control. The different types of school render girls chaste and virtuous to varying degrees. Through everyday practices, this curriculum effects girls’ embodied experience of sexuality. Minangkabau teenage girls have a highly developed sense of their own sexuality, but, far from experiencing a sexual revolution as a result of globalization, most have developed a sexual awareness that is weighted with cultural and religious burdens. Minang female adolescent sexuality is a moral sexuality based on Islam and <i>adat</i>.
topic Minangkabau
sexuality
religion
education
url http://www.kitlv-journals.nl/index.php/btlv/article/view/3627
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