The ‘honour-shame syndrome’ is an anthropological model originally developed in the sixties to describe Mediterranean cultural unity. The model came under heavy criticism, producing a veritable ‘anti-Mediterraneanist’ backlash. There is, however, a renewed interest in the regional paradigm. This article attempts an analysis of concepts of ‘honour’ in Malta, contextualising it within the broader ethnographic and linguistic evidence from the region. The author argues that ‘honour’ is a salient moral concept, and in fact, Maltese has a rich and highly nuanced discourse of honour, which includes both sexualised and nonsexualised aspects. While the author criticises the simplistic ‘honour-shame syndrome’ paradigm, he argues that honou...
The presence of religion in Maltese society at the end of the millennium is not insignificant, but i...
What follows is an updated text of a paper in the same name which I had read at a seminar on 'Develo...
http://www.anthropos.eu/anthropos/journal/abstracts/1061/12-Albert-Doja.phpInternational audienceThe...
The social historians and anthropologists presented the concept of honour and shame as the values of...
Little is known about the sizeable Maltese communities developing along the southern and eastern sho...
There is a rich anthropological literature on honour and revenge, but more often than not, analyses ...
This paper offers recent dynamics of unauthorized migration and interception in the central Mediterr...
published first as (erstmalig folgendermaßen erschienen): Elisabetta Costa: “Please ‘Like’ Me: Recon...
Domestic violence has its roots in culture and, in turn, culture constructs stereotypes about differ...
Cultures of honor developed in contexts in which a person’s livelihood was easily stolen (such as a ...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Research evidence and theoretical accounts of honor point to d...
A growing literature in social and cultural psychology has examined cultures of honour primarily foc...
Influenced by history as much as by geography, identity changes, or develops, both as a cultural phe...
Much has been written about how the social structures of honor and shame affected women in Mediterra...
The article discusses Pina-Cabral life-long need to contend with a series of deeply equivocal attrib...
The presence of religion in Maltese society at the end of the millennium is not insignificant, but i...
What follows is an updated text of a paper in the same name which I had read at a seminar on 'Develo...
http://www.anthropos.eu/anthropos/journal/abstracts/1061/12-Albert-Doja.phpInternational audienceThe...
The social historians and anthropologists presented the concept of honour and shame as the values of...
Little is known about the sizeable Maltese communities developing along the southern and eastern sho...
There is a rich anthropological literature on honour and revenge, but more often than not, analyses ...
This paper offers recent dynamics of unauthorized migration and interception in the central Mediterr...
published first as (erstmalig folgendermaßen erschienen): Elisabetta Costa: “Please ‘Like’ Me: Recon...
Domestic violence has its roots in culture and, in turn, culture constructs stereotypes about differ...
Cultures of honor developed in contexts in which a person’s livelihood was easily stolen (such as a ...
Cataloged from PDF version of article.Research evidence and theoretical accounts of honor point to d...
A growing literature in social and cultural psychology has examined cultures of honour primarily foc...
Influenced by history as much as by geography, identity changes, or develops, both as a cultural phe...
Much has been written about how the social structures of honor and shame affected women in Mediterra...
The article discusses Pina-Cabral life-long need to contend with a series of deeply equivocal attrib...
The presence of religion in Maltese society at the end of the millennium is not insignificant, but i...
What follows is an updated text of a paper in the same name which I had read at a seminar on 'Develo...
http://www.anthropos.eu/anthropos/journal/abstracts/1061/12-Albert-Doja.phpInternational audienceThe...