be observed in plain view in Arab society because the
family is the main basis for the formation of society.
In his writings, Joseph also distinguishes patriarchy
in the Arab world into five (5) forms, namely: social
patriarchy, economic patriarchy, political patriarchy,
religious patriarchy, and patriarchal selfhood (in self
patriarchy).
Social patriarchy refers to Arab families who
place the position of father and son having authority
and power, including male lineages (patrilineal) used
by Arab society. Economic patriarchy refers to the
distribution of inheritance which places men to get
greater inheritance rights than Arab women.
Religious patriarchy is the daily practice of the
community that is obtained from the
teachings/guidance of the religion it adheres to.
Inheritance law and marriage law are examples of
how religion provides guidelines for behaving in
community members. Finally, the patriarchy of
selfhood refers to the formation of character and self-
concept of an individual who accepts the conception
of men more powerful than women.
Through this paper, the researcher seeks to
incorporate elements of the digital world in Joseph's
study of neo-patriarchy in modern Arab families. The
novelty of the concept offered by the author, which is
digital patriarchy related to ethnicity, gender
identity,and construction, cannot be separated from
the exposure of social media in the digital world. If
Patil is concerned that neopatriarchy occurs in
modern Arab families, digital patriarchy is one form
of the neo-patriarchy in milenial era. In this regards,
digital patriarchy is one of the consequences as well
as the problems that must be faced by Arabwomen on
revolution industry 4.0 era.
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