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13 Times Pakistani Dramas Are Totally Promoting Sexist Behavior

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Pakistani dramas are often thought to be portraying “reality” of Pakistan but little do we realize how much sexism and misogyny it keeps encouraging on daily basis. These dramas further fuel the already existing patriarchy in our culture instead of helping to eliminate it. I know some of you are probably rolling their eyes because dramey sirf entertainment ke liye hotey hain, dekh ke bhool jao. No, media influences our choices more than we know and by endorsing patriarchy, they are doing a huge disservice to our Pakistani society. Unfortunately, the more misogynistic a drama is, the higher are the views it gets.

Here are 13 ways in which these dramas have promoted patriarchy:



1. A woman wearing Western clothes is always portrayed in a negative character
She is usually very modern and everything that you wouldn’t want in a bahu – lihaaz, tehzeeb, adab etc.

Screen-Shot-2017-06-30-at-10.23.13-1600x878.png

Source: Hum Network Limited


Also read: 13 Signs You Might Know Someone Who’s As Problematic As Sara From Humsafar



2. A husband would slap his wife any time and get away with it
Even in dramas like Kankar, whose main idea was that women shouldn’t take physical abuse, had dialogues in which the protagonist affirmed that according to Quran, it is allowed to beat women who are nafarmaan and her explanation for not deserving a beating was that she is farmabardar. You can’t hit another human being no matter what!

Via: deenga.com


3. It’s a norm to marry more than one woman at the same time with no care about actually behaving properly or providing for them
And sometimes the reasons are so ridiculous – she can’t pop out a baby or more specifically, a baby boy! Marrying two women at the same time is such a recurring theme and that’s disturbing for all the right reasons.

mera-saeein.jpg

Source: A & B Entertainment


4. And then the whole lives of those second, third and fourth wives are consumed with just thinking and talking about their husband
Like they have nothing else that matters to their fully formed minds that function absolutely well.

Via: Tumblr


5. Women can only go out to earn because they have to support their family and not because they just want to be empowered
Hayee bechari ko dekho apne ghar ko sambhalne ke liye kitni mehnat karti hai.

Also, aurtein bechari aur lachaar hi achi lagti hain.

Via: Tumblr


6. Most of the women’s purpose in their lives are to become “good housewives”
How many times have they shown a drama where she has a career? In the ones she does have a career, the focal point of that drama is precisely her career and how she juggles between family life and profession. Why does that needs to be the main plot?

Source: IISuperwomanII / YouTube


7. A man is never shown cooking, cleaning, changing diapers or helping out around the house chores
This just enforces the stereotype that these duties are for women to perform.



Source: gqindia.com


8. Women are expected to tolerate abuse for the sake of “ghar basana”
Dramas like Durr-e-shahwar have their whole storylines based on glorifying this abuse!

rape-victim-3.jpg

Source: earhustle411.com



9. Men can flirt around but they need seedhi saadhi biwiyan
Consider our beloved Zaroon from Zindagi Gulzar Hai.

448732-fawad-and-mahira-2.jpg

Via: Tumblr



10. All a rapist ever did was to commit a small mistake out of “Love”!
Bekhudi, remember?

rape-women-encounters-1.jpg

Source: riseforindia.com



11. It is haath se nikal jaana if a woman reads her nikkah naama and objects to some points. Also, in that case, it is okay for parents to forcefully marry her.
Yes, I am talking about “Zid”.

Source: Sadia Jabbar Productions


12. Boys will be boys. Men will be men.
This idea is there in God knows how many dramas. Whatever they do can be forgiven and forgotten. They can always repent.

boy-not-a-mard-5.gif

Source: ARY Films



13. A woman is always supposed to be dependent on a man
Without mard ka sahara, her life is incomplete. Even if the marriage is abusive, she is expected to put up with it. If not for herself, then for her kids. Consider Digest Writer and Vasl as an example. These two dramas would have been so good if the women had, in the end, decided to live on their own.

tumblr_nh2oqgOS241t6s70ao1_500.gif

Source: Oriental Films

I don’t mean to say that every drama promotes patriarchy but most of them do! I wish we had more dramas that encouraged equality of genders.

 
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seems like the article is written for indian dramas as i never seen women that weak in most of the Pakistani Dramas......most of the women in Pakistani dramas are seen as strong and stand up for their rights.
 
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seems like the article is written for indian dramas as i never seen women that weak in most of the Pakistani Dramas......most of the women in Pakistani dramas are seen as strong and stand up for their rights.

I don't watch Pakistani dramas as they are too family oriented for me but I remember from my childhood my mother used to watch dramas and they had things menioned in the OP.
 
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Sexist behaviour is just the start of it.

Besides maybe one or two they're all round cancer. Cousinly love affairs (wtf lmao). Constant cooking and spicefest. Acting is complete f**k all. Zero substance or actual story.

Why cant we make something meaningful ?
 
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Sexist behaviour is just the start of it.

Besides maybe one or two they're all round cancer. Cousinly love affairs (wtf lmao). Constant cooking and spicefest. Acting is complete f**k all. Zero substance or actual story.

Why cant we make something meaningful ?

Its pretty sexist against men i believe. Media is too women centered thus its monotonous and dull.
 
. .
Love romance love romance love romance, shadi ho gi nahi ho gi.
85% are this only one topic.

85 percent of politic as well in the region. From the ancient mughals to the modern feudals. So what has really changed?

butt parast hain hum....is baat ko kese bayaan karon kese samjhaon
 
.
Pakistani dramas are often thought to be portraying “reality” of Pakistan but little do we realize how much sexism and misogyny it keeps encouraging on daily basis. These dramas further fuel the already existing patriarchy in our culture instead of helping to eliminate it. I know some of you are probably rolling their eyes because dramey sirf entertainment ke liye hotey hain, dekh ke bhool jao. No, media influences our choices more than we know and by endorsing patriarchy, they are doing a huge disservice to our Pakistani society. Unfortunately, the more misogynistic a drama is, the higher are the views it gets.

Here are 13 ways in which these dramas have promoted patriarchy:



1. A woman wearing Western clothes is always portrayed in a negative character
She is usually very modern and everything that you wouldn’t want in a bahu – lihaaz, tehzeeb, adab etc.

Screen-Shot-2017-06-30-at-10.23.13-1600x878.png

Source: Hum Network Limited


Also read: 13 Signs You Might Know Someone Who’s As Problematic As Sara From Humsafar



2. A husband would slap his wife any time and get away with it
Even in dramas like Kankar, whose main idea was that women shouldn’t take physical abuse, had dialogues in which the protagonist affirmed that according to Quran, it is allowed to beat women who are nafarmaan and her explanation for not deserving a beating was that she is farmabardar. You can’t hit another human being no matter what!

Via: deenga.com


3. It’s a norm to marry more than one woman at the same time with no care about actually behaving properly or providing for them
And sometimes the reasons are so ridiculous – she can’t pop out a baby or more specifically, a baby boy! Marrying two women at the same time is such a recurring theme and that’s disturbing for all the right reasons.

mera-saeein.jpg

Source: A & B Entertainment


4. And then the whole lives of those second, third and fourth wives are consumed with just thinking and talking about their husband
Like they have nothing else that matters to their fully formed minds that function absolutely well.

Via: Tumblr


5. Women can only go out to earn because they have to support their family and not because they just want to be empowered
Hayee bechari ko dekho apne ghar ko sambhalne ke liye kitni mehnat karti hai.

Also, aurtein bechari aur lachaar hi achi lagti hain.

Via: Tumblr


6. Most of the women’s purpose in their lives are to become “good housewives”
How many times have they shown a drama where she has a career? In the ones she does have a career, the focal point of that drama is precisely her career and how she juggles between family life and profession. Why does that needs to be the main plot?

Source: IISuperwomanII / YouTube


7. A man is never shown cooking, cleaning, changing diapers or helping out around the house chores
This just enforces the stereotype that these duties are for women to perform.



Source: gqindia.com


8. Women are expected to tolerate abuse for the sake of “ghar basana”
Dramas like Durr-e-shahwar have their whole storylines based on glorifying this abuse!

rape-victim-3.jpg

Source: earhustle411.com



9. Men can flirt around but they need seedhi saadhi biwiyan
Consider our beloved Zaroon from Zindagi Gulzar Hai.

448732-fawad-and-mahira-2.jpg

Via: Tumblr



10. All a rapist ever did was to commit a small mistake out of “Love”!
Bekhudi, remember?

rape-women-encounters-1.jpg

Source: riseforindia.com



11. It is haath se nikal jaana if a woman reads her nikkah naama and objects to some points. Also, in that case, it is okay for parents to forcefully marry her.
Yes, I am talking about “Zid”.

Source: Sadia Jabbar Productions


12. Boys will be boys. Men will be men.
This idea is there in God knows how many dramas. Whatever they do can be forgiven and forgotten. They can always repent.

boy-not-a-mard-5.gif

Source: ARY Films



13. A woman is always supposed to be dependent on a man
Without mard ka sahara, her life is incomplete. Even if the marriage is abusive, she is expected to put up with it. If not for herself, then for her kids. Consider Digest Writer and Vasl as an example. These two dramas would have been so good if the women had, in the end, decided to live on their own.

tumblr_nh2oqgOS241t6s70ao1_500.gif

Source: Oriental Films

I don’t mean to say that every drama promotes patriarchy but most of them do! I wish we had more dramas that encouraged equality of genders.
Where are these women? I want 3....
 
.
85 percent of politic as well in the region. From the ancient mughals to the modern feudals. So what has really changed?

butt parast hain hum....is baat ko kese bayaan karon kese samjhaon
Beside Terroism and road accidents the murder and related accidents coz of love affairs failure, refusal of shadi ya Pasand ki shadi, every kid start moving under pants looking for a girl friend, Romance is a fact and does involved in human DNA but in sub continent this thingy eating brains.
 
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Beside Terroism and road accidents the murder and related accidents coz of love affairs failure, refusal of shadi ya Pasand ki shadi, every kid start moving under pants looking for a girl friend, Romance is a fact and does involved in human DNA but in sub continent this thingy eating brains.

Its one of the biggest disadvantage of oral cultures flourishing in tropical climates.

Actually it represents the most primitive instinct animalistic in nature left over from the time Ape evolved in Human.

Worst on this maybe yet to come when the superficial wave kicks in.
 
. . .
The problem is not the drama, as much as the problem is the viewers. TV shows all sorts of negative things, it tells stories to entertain you, not educate you.

Don't be idiots and watch television. Turn it off and spend time with your children, your family, your friends. Teach morality through setting an example and by discussing the sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh). My parents are very old and they still give examples and stories which include the life stories of their grand parents and great grandparents as examples to us of good behaviour, or challenges you might face in life.

I watch lots of TV but never during family time. I watch it to entertain me, not to educate me. I keep my children away from it unless we are watching cartoons/films for entertainment or documentaries for education. Otherwise family time is time spent with our own company, not the TV.
 
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