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An Islamic feminism? competing understandings of womens rights in MoroccoScott, Jennifer Lee 01 December 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Ain't I a Muslim woman?: African American Muslim Women Practicing 'Multiple Critique'Aceves, Sara 03 April 2010 (has links)
This thesis explores both limits and possibilities. It reflects on processes of appropriation, re-signification and critique as practiced variably by African American Muslim women. I situate these processes within the concept of multiple critique, for specifically three moments-Sherman Jackson's Third Resurrection, the black feminist tradition, and Islamic feminisms.
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The changing roles of Muslim women in South Africa.Bux, Zubeida. January 2004 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2004.
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Muslim Women: Between Culture and FeminismUnknown Date (has links)
Women’s rights in Islam became a major subject after the third feminist
movement in the United States. When feminism spread globally, many Islamic scholars
connected it to Islam. Islamic feminism is a term that takes most of its ideologies from
the two primary sources of Islam – the Quran and the Sunnah. This qualitative research
explained the bias directed towards women in Islam by using objective reasoning
through examples as well as by encompassing any misinterpretation of views regarding
women’s rights in Islam. The method used was a content analysis. The findings were
that Islam is a feminist religion. While Islam provides Muslim women with full rights,
U.S. and Saudi Arabian cultures have impeded Islamic feminism. Lastly, the U.S.
feminism started as a movement by women to empower women. However, Islamic
feminism first focused on the rights of all human beings, then concentrated on women in
Islam. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2016. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Women and political participation : a partial translation of ‘Abd al-Ḥalīm Muhammad Abū Shaqqah’s Taḥrīr al-Mar’ah fī ‘Aṣr al-Risālah (The liberation of women in the prophetic period), with a contextual introduction to the author and his workIsmail, Nadia 06 1900 (has links)
This thesis is a translation of a chapter that examines the role of Muslim women in politics during the early Islamic period and their engagement with religious and political discourses. This subject raises a combination of provocative challenges for Islamic discourse as Muslim women have had a complex relationship with their religious tradition dating back to the very inception of Islam. Despite Qur’ānic injunctions and Prophetic affirmations of the egalitarian status of Muslim women, social inequality and injustice directed at women remains a persistent problem in Muslim society. In the translated text Abū Shaqqah goes about re-invoking the normative tradition in order to affirm the role of Muslim women in politics. Furthermore the translation is prefaced by a critical introduction outlining the contours of the 20th century landscape, which attempts to describe the struggle of Muslim women in Abū Shaqqah’s time. / Religious Studies and Arabic / M.A. (Arabic)
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