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Ugly Feelings of Greed: The Misuse of Friendship in Working Class Amman

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Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Abstract

In the eastern part of Jordan’s capital, Amman, where women maintained friendships through the exchange of help and support, accusations of maslaha (opportunism) had the potential to undermine relationships. Those accusations generated ugly feelings characterized by a confusion between the things wrong with oneself that make one vulnerable to the problem of maslaha and the things wrong with Jordanian society that make maslaha so widespread. Drawing on ethnographic research conducted in one East Amman neighbourhood, Tal al-Zahra, between 2011 and 2015, this article explores the ways that encounters with maslaha felt ugly, the way these ugly feelings generated critiques of contemporary Jordanian morals, and the role of these feelings in generating ethical reflection by prompting women to see themselves as separate from, and critical of, the societies in which they live.

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Keywords

47 Language, Communication and Culture, 4702 Cultural Studies, 44 Human Society

Journal Title

Cambridge Journal of Anthropology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0305-7674
2047-7716

Volume Title

37

Publisher

Berghahn

Rights

All rights reserved