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Gender, Politics, and Islam

Allen, Carolyn(Edited by)Howard, Judith A.(Edited by)Saliba, Therese(Edited by)
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This collection extends the boundaries of global feminism to include Islamic women.

Challenging Orientalist assumptions of Muslim women as victims of Islam, these essays focus on women's negotiations for identity, power and agency as participants in religious, cultural and nationalist movements.

This book gathers essays from the journal "Signs" on women in the Middle East, South Asia and the Diaspora to explore how women negotiate identities and attempt to gain political, economic and legal rights. "Gender, Politics and Islam" shows Islam to be a diverse set of variable practices and beliefs shaped by region, nation, ethnicity, sect and class, as well as by responses to many cultural and economic processes.

In examining women's participation in religious and nationalist projects, these critics debate controverisal issues: Does Islamic feminism provide an alternative, revolutionary paradigm to Eurocentric liberal humanism and western feminism?

Is Islam more oppressive to women than the modern secular state?

How are the lives and texts of Arab and Muslim women constructed for local or western consumption?These essays expose the shortcomings of the secularist assumptions of many recent feminist analyses, which continue to treat religion in general and fundamentalism in particular as a tool of oppression used against women, rather than as a viable form of feminist agency producing contradictory effects for its participants.

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Product Details
University of Chicago Press
0226734293 / 9780226734293
Paperback / softback
01/08/2002
United States
English
354 pages
23 cm
general Learn More
The essays in this volume originally appeared in various issues of Signs.