
Marriage has been part of both human discourse and social organization across cultures and down the centuries. One aspect of this is the historical custom of marriage as an affair of state, undertaken for example by the royal houses of Europe to cement alliances or achieve political stability. More generally, marriage has historically been linked to social cohesion. Equally, and as part of that dynamic, marriage has had a religious dimension and a sacral character, although some marriages are contracted outside religion and although some relationships fall outside the formal marital structure. Every important culture in the world has generally accepted marriage protocols that make religion and regular social interactions overlap. Only in 20th-century Western culture did marriage become significantly secular.
Marriage protocols referenced in the Holy Quran of Islam explain that men, as the stronger and more important marriage partners, should protect and maintain their "devoutly obedient" and "lawful," or chaste, women. Husbands who fear disloyalty or bad conduct may admonish wives, withhold sex, and beat them but lightly until they "return to obedience".Social differentials between men and women have yielded an interpretation of male authority over women not in terms of obligation to but control over them. A woman's husband "possesses her body by law, rather than by emotional bond"
NADIAH SYAFIQAH BT KASIM
A123230
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