Tea Practices in Mongolia A Field of Female Power and Gendered Meanings

被引:0
|
作者
Bamana, Gaby [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Wales Coll Cardiff, Cardiff CF1 3NS, S Glam, Wales
关键词
female power; gendered meanings; tea practices; Mongolia; female identity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
I27 [民间文学];
学科分类号
030304 ;
摘要
This article provides a description and analysis of tea practices in Mongolia that disclose features of female power and gendered meanings relevant in social and cultural processes. I suggest that women's gendered experiences generate a differentiated power that they engage in social actions. Moreover, in tea practices women invoke meanings that are also differentiated by their gendered experience and the powerful position of meaning construction. Female power, female identity, and gendered meanings are distinctive in the complex whole of cultural and social processes in Mongolia. This article contributes to the understudied field of tea practices in a country that does not grow tea, yet whose inhabitants have turned this commodity into an icon of social and cultural processes in everyday life.
引用
收藏
页码:193 / 214
页数:22
相关论文
共 49 条
  • [21] Included or excluded? The dual influences of the organisational field and organisational practices on new female academics
    Elg, Ulf
    Jonnergard, Karin
    [J]. GENDER AND EDUCATION, 2010, 22 (02) : 209 - 225
  • [22] Estimation of far-field divergence of high power TEA CO2 laser
    Zhang, Kuo
    Lu, Jun
    Yang, Guilong
    Chen, Fei
    Li, Dianjun
    Zheng, Changbin
    Guo, Jin
    [J]. Hongwai yu Jiguang Gongcheng/Infrared and Laser Engineering, 2015, 44 (08): : 2286 - 2291
  • [23] Power, community mobilization, and condom use practices among female sex workers in Andhra Pradesh, India
    Blankenship, Kim A.
    West, Brooke S.
    Kershaw, Trace S.
    Biradavolu, Monica R.
    [J]. AIDS, 2008, 22 : S109 - S116
  • [24] POWER-REACTOR EMERGENCY RESPONSE FIELD MONITORING PRACTICES IN THE UNITED-STATES
    WIDNER, TE
    [J]. HEALTH PHYSICS, 1990, 58 (06): : 753 - 758
  • [25] A field tool for the aerobic power evaluation of middle-aged female recreational runners
    Bonet, J. B.
    Magalhaes, J.
    Viscor, G.
    Pages, T.
    Javierre, C. F.
    Torrella, J. R.
    [J]. WOMEN & HEALTH, 2020, 60 (07) : 839 - 848
  • [26] Uniform field electrodes for high-power and high-repetition TEA-CO2 lasers
    Ishii, Akira
    Okita, Yuji
    Yasuoka, Koichi
    Tamagawa, Tohru
    Nakagawa, Satoshi
    Ohshima, Iwao
    [J]. Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, Part 1: Regular Papers and Short Notes and Review Papers, 1993, 32 (1 A): : 88 - 92
  • [27] Field practices of UHF technique for on-line PD monitoring and site testing of power transformers
    Tang, ZG
    Li, CR
    Huang, XQ
    Wang, W
    Ding, YS
    [J]. 2004 IEEE PES POWER SYSTEMS CONFERENCE & EXPOSITION, VOLS 1 - 3, 2004, : 1176 - 1182
  • [28] Neoliberal Elites in Mexico: How a Field of Power that Transforms Social Practices of Political Elites is Built
    Salas-Porras, Alejandra
    [J]. REVISTA MEXICANA DE CIENCIAS POLITICAS Y SOCIALES, 2014, 59 (222): : 279 - 312
  • [29] Evaluating the Tea Bag Index approach for different management practices in agroecosystems using long-term field experiments in Austria and Sweden
    Gmach, Maria Regina
    Bolinder, Martin Anders
    Menichetti, Lorenzo
    Katterer, Thomas
    Spiegel, Heide
    Akesson, Olle
    Friedel, Jurgen Kurt
    Surbock, Andreas
    Schweinzer, Agnes
    Sanden, Taru
    [J]. SOIL, 2024, 10 (01) : 407 - 423
  • [30] Identification, synthesis, and field evaluation of components of the female-produced sex pheromone of Helopeltis cinchonae (Hemiptera: Miridae), an emerging pest of tea
    Magsi, Fida Hussain
    Cai, Xiaoming
    Luo, Zongxiu
    Li, Zhaoqun
    Bian, Lei
    Xiu, Chunli
    Fu, Nanxia
    Li, Jianlong
    Hall, David R.
    Chen, Zongmao
    [J]. PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE, 2024, 80 (09) : 4243 - 4252