This book offers a new insight on the intersection between Islam and feminism and the impact it has on Muslim women's self-narratives of equality from its early encounter during colonialism to its emergence in the 1990s in Indonesia.
This book offers a new insight on the intersection between Islam and feminism and the impact it has on Muslim women's self-narratives of equality from its early encounter during colonialism to its emergence in the 1990s in Indonesia.
Etin Anwar serves as the Chair of Religious Studies at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, New York. She is the author of Gender and Self in Islam (Routledge, 2006) and has published several articles on Ibn Sina, Meister Eckhart, Ibn Arabi, and Muslim women's movements in Indonesia in various journals.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. The Making of the Emancipation Era 2. The Association Era and the Politics of Emancipation 3. Gender Politics in the Era of Development 4. Engendering Equality in the Integration Era 5. The Proliferation Era and the Discursive Patterns of Islamic Feminism Conclusion
Introduction 1. The Making of the Emancipation Era 2. The Association Era and the Politics of Emancipation 3. Gender Politics in the Era of Development 4. Engendering Equality in the Integration Era 5. The Proliferation Era and the Discursive Patterns of Islamic Feminism Conclusion
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