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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
91

Disruption and development kanyalengs in the Gambia /

Hough, Carolyn Ann. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Iowa, 2006. / Supervisor: Ellen Lewin. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 254-273).
92

Between Qur'an and custom: gendered negotiations in contemporary Sana'a

Suni, Anoush Tamar 24 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
93

As mulheres, os perfumes e as preces: um olhar simbólico sobre a sexualidade no Islã / Women, perfumes and prayers: a symbolic approach to sexuality in Islam

Camila Motta Paiva 27 August 2018 (has links)
Pesquisar sexualidade na religião é uma tarefa complexa. Por mais que exista uma tentativa de afastar a religião do debate sobre a sexualidade, é fato que há um importante entrelaçamento entre essas duas categorias. Em todas as sociedades definem-se as normas sexuais e delineiam-se quais seriam as transgressões, sendo a religião uma das instâncias de sua regulação. No caso do Islã, por estabelecer um código de conduta a ser seguido em todas as esferas da vida dos muçulmanos e das muçulmanas, inclusive no que diz respeito à vivência da sexualidade, sexo e prazer apresentam algumas especificidades. Para entender quais são as práticas, vivências e sentidos atribuídos à sexualidade neste campo, é preciso antes considerar as prescrições do que é lícito (halal) e ilícito (haram) de acordo com a religião, em seus próprios termos. A partir do diálogo com dez mulheres muçulmanas brasileiras revertidas e da inserção e circulação da pesquisadora em campo islâmico, serão tecidas reflexões sobre a concepção islâmica da sexualidade e suas implicações para o exercício da sexualidade feminina. A análise dos dados está apoiada nos referenciais teóricos advindos tanto da psicanálise como da antropologia. O trabalho apresenta que, apesar das prescrições existentes mesmo dentro da licitude do casamento, a prática sexual no Islã extrapola a finalidade reprodutiva: há um incentivo aos prazeres, colocando a satisfação sexual como um direito de ambos os cônjuges. Por um lado, torna-se crucial relativizar o clichê da mulher muçulmana sexualmente reprimida: diferentemente do que se pensa no senso comum, o sexo do ponto de vista islâmico não é tabu. Por outro lado, é preciso assumir que a sexualidade é uma arena em que o desejo convive e disputa com prazeres e perigos; facilidades e resistências; saberes e poderes / To research sexuality in religion is a complex task. While there is an attempt to alienate religion from the debate about sexuality, there is an important connection between these two categories. Sexual norms and their transgressions are defined in all societies and religion is one of the instances in which they are regulated. In the case of Islam, by establishing a code of conduct to be followed in all spheres of life of Muslims, including the experience of sexuality, sex and pleasure have some specificities. In order to understand the practices, experiences and senses attributed to sexuality in this field, one must first consider the prescriptions of what is lawful (halal) and unlawful (haram) according to religion, in its own terms. From the dialogue with ten Brazilian Muslim women reverted to Islam and the insertion and circulation of the researcher in the Islamic field, reflections will be outlined about the Islamic conception of sexuality and its implications for the exercise of female sexuality. The analysis of the data is supported by the theoretical references derived from both psychoanalysis and anthropology. This dissertation argues that despite the prescriptions even within the lawfulness of the marriage, sexual practice in Islam extrapolates the reproductive purpose: there is an incentive to pleasures, placing sexual satisfaction as a right of both spouses. It becomes crucial to relativize the cliché of sexually repressed Muslim women: unlike common sense, sex in Islam is not taboo. On the other hand, it is urgent to assume that sexuality is an arena in which desire coexists and disputes with pleasures and dangers; facilities and resistances; knowledge and power
94

The contribution of women to Muslim Society : a study of selected autobiographical and bibliographical literature

Nawab, Suraiya 23 August 2012 (has links)
M.A. / It is imperative to acknowledge that my experiences as a counsellor at the Islamic Careline, an organization which deals with the personal and social problems of the community has sptirred my conviction that Muslim women need to empower themselves with knowledge of their religion. In this way they can facilitate the need to confront the reality of their situation both locally and internationally. I have also had the honour of correspondence with Muslim scholars such as Maryam Jameelah from Pakistan and B. A'isha Lemu from Nigeria. This interaction has provided me with enlightenment and inspiration and has truly been a pleasurable experience.
95

Perceptions of the veil among a group of Sudanese women: a qualitative study

Wani, Catherine January 2004 (has links)
Magister Philosophiae - MPhil / The Islamic dress code has been forcibly imposed on the women in Sudan, since 1983, and many feminists researchers have criticized the practices of the veil as a tool to oppress women. This study aimed to explore a group of Sudanese women, currently living in South Africa, experiences and perceptions of the veil, whether the veil is a religious dress code or a tool that has been used to exercise inequality. / South Africa
96

ISLAMOPHOBIA AND ‘OTHERING’: NARRATIVES OF INTERNATIONAL HIJABI MUSLIM WOMEN IN HIGHER EDUCATION

Nastaran Karimi (6635903) 15 May 2019 (has links)
Historically, various minority groups have faced multiple forms of prejudice and discrimination. The sources of such attitudes are mainly ignorance about these groups. One such group is Muslims living in western countries. The fear and dread of Muslims and Islam has deep historical roots; however, these attitudes escalated after the September 11 tragedy. After September 11, Muslims became the headlines of news and Americans were exposed to distorted images of Muslims in the media. This misrepresentation of Muslims in the media led to yet another form of xenophobia, which resulted in ‘othering’ Muslims. In schools and universities, the story was not different. In the following study, I discuss the ‘othering’ of 6 international hijabi Muslim women studying at a Midwestern University in light of the Islamophobic tendencies developed after September 11. I create narratives of these experiences to understand how hijabi Muslim women make sense of their experiences in relation to the larger sociopolitical discourse. These narratives contribute to the larger effort of creating an equitable educational experience for students from all backgrounds.
97

Asghar Ali Engineer's views on liberation theology and women's issues in Islam : an analysis

Nuryatno, Muhammad Agus. January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
98

Unveiling agency : feminism and multiculturalism in the "Affaire du Foulard"

Bassel, Leah. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
99

Muslim women's honor and its custodians : the British colonizers, the landlords and the legislators of Pakistan : a historical study

Wasti, Nadia Syeda. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
100

"Three Young Girls" : A Case Study of Mediatization of Religion and National Identity in the Online Reception of Halal-TV

Unander-Scharin, Ingrid January 2022 (has links)
The Swedish national narrative regarding religion often highlights the 2000 separation of the Church of Sweden from the state and a steady decline in religiosity within the population. However, increased immigration since the end of the Second World War has resulted in rising religious diversity, particularly in the growth of Islam as a minority religion. As members of a minority group, Muslim women often face issues concerning their representation in the media, frequently connecting the women’s identities to debates about immigration, religion, and feminism in Sweden. Through understanding the role religion plays within the conceptualization of Swedish national identity, it becomes possible to then analyze how discourse about Muslim women in the media is associated with ideas of representation, religion, and national identity. In studying the discourse around the 2008 television program Halal-TV, newspaper articles about the program and the articles’ corresponding comment fields reveal recurring themes about media representation, perceptions of national belonging and diversity, and attitudes towards minority groups like Muslim women. In conducting a critical discourse analysis of the online discourse through the lens of postcolonial feminism, media reception theory is used as a theoretical framework to illustrate how the online discussions about Halal-TV constitute a public sphere on issues of sameness and diversity, media representation, and religion in Sweden. This case study thus acts as a glimpse into the concurrent Swedish society and media institutions’ approaches towards religious and cultural diversity and representation in the public broadcasting media.

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