Gender and National Identity: Women and Politics in Muslim Societies

Предња корица
Valentine Moghadam
Palgrave Macmillan, 1994 - 180 страница

Gender politics exist inevitably in all Islamist movements that expect women to assume the burden of a largely male-defined tradition. Even in secular political movements in the Muslim world - notably those anti-colonial national liberation movements where women were actively involved- women have experiences since independence a general reversal of the gains made. This collection, written by women from the countries concerned, explores the gender dynamics of a variety of political movements with very different trajectories to reveal how nationalism, revolution and Islamization are all gendered processes.

The authors explore women's experiences in the Algerian national liberation movement and more recently the fundamentalist FIS; similarly their involvement in the struggle to construct a Bengali national identity and independent Bangladeshi state; the events leading to the overthrow of the Shah and subsequent Islamization of Iran; revolution and civil war in Afghanistan; and the Palestinian Intifada.

This book argues that in periods of rapid political change, women in Muslim societies are in reality central to efforts to construct a national identity.

 

Садржај

Valentine M Moghadam
1
Islamization women and cultural relativism
7
Moudjahidates during and after the Algerian
18
national liberation Islamization and women
40
National identity fundamentalism and the womens movement
63
the trajectory of the Woman
81
Nayereh Tohidi
110
Palestinian women and the Intifada
148
Select bibliography
171
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О аутору (1994)

Valentine M Moghadam is a senior research fellow at the World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER), Helsinki. Valentine M Moghadam is a senior research fellow at the World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU/WIDER), Helsinki.

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