Beyond the Veil: Male-female Dynamics in a Modern Muslim SocietySchenkman Publishing Company, 1975 - 132 pages Mernissi has sought to reclaim the ideological discourse on women and sexuality from the stranglehold of patriarchy. She critically examines the classical corpus of religious-juristic texts, including the Hadith, and reinterprets them from a feminist perspective. In her view, the Muslim ideal of the silent, passive, obedient woman has nothing to do with the authentic message of Islam. Rather, it is a construction of the 'ulama', the male jurists-theologians who manipulated and distorted the religious texts in order to preserve the patriarchal system. Mernissi's work explores the relationship between sexual ideology, gender identity, sociopolitical organization, and the status of women in Islam; her special focus, however, is Moroccan society and culture. As a feminist, her work represents an attempt to undermine the ideological and political systems that silence and oppress Muslim women. |
Table des matières
Social Order | 15 |
The Regulation of Sexuality in the PreMuslim | 29 |
1 | 35 |
Droits d'auteur | |
6 autres sections non affichées
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Beyond the Veil: Male-female Dynamics in a Modern Muslim Society Fatima Mernissi Affichage d'extraits - 1975 |
Beyond the Veil: Male-female Dynamics in Modern Muslim Society Fatima Mernissi Affichage d'extraits - 1987 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
according Aicha al-Bukhari al-Ghazali al-Jami al-Muwatta Allah Anomie Aqqad Arab Arabia Arabo-Muslim as-Sahih asked at-Tabaqat Beirut believe BESM Bint Cairo child Code du Statut concept conflict conjugal unit desegregation divorce economic father Fatiha F fear female sexuality fitna girls hammam heterosexual human husband Ibid Ibn Khaldun Ibn Saad idda ideology Imam Ghazali individual institution interaction interviews Islam Jahiliya Kacem Amin Kitab legislation letters male spaces male-female dynamics Malik man's Maroc marriage marry Medina Moroccan Moroccan Code Moroccan society Morocco mother mother-in-law Muhammad Muslim marriage Muslim order Muslim society nationalist parents patrilineal patterns physical paternity polygamy problem Prophet Quran relation repudiation revealed role rural seclusion self-determination sexes sexual desire sexual intercourse sexual segregation Sharia Sigmund Freud social order Statut Personnel structure Surah theory traditional women tribe Udrite love Umma veil Western wife wives woman women and Islam women's liberation young zina