ABSTRACT

This volume brings together the work of a group of Islamic studies scholars from across the globe. They discuss how past and present Muslim women have participated in the struggle for gender justice in Muslim communities and around the world.

The essays demonstrate a diversity of methodological approaches, religious and secular sources, and theoretical frameworks for understanding Muslim negotiations of gender norms and practices. Part I (Concepts) puts into conversation women scholars who define Muslima theology and Islamic feminism vis-à-vis secular notions of gender diversity and discuss the deployment of the oppression of Muslim women as a hegemonic imperialist strategy. The chapters in Part II (Sources) engage with the Qur’an, hadith, and sunna as religious sources to be examined and reinterpreted in the quest for gender justice as God’s will and the example of the Prophet Muhammad. In Part III (Histories), contributors search for Muslim women’s agency as scholars, thinkers, and activists from the early period of Islam to the present – from Southeast Asia to North America. 

Representing a transnational and cross-generational conversation, this work will be a key resource to students and scholars interested in the history of Islamic feminism, Muslim women, gender justice, and Islam.

chapter |14 pages

Muslim women and gender justice

An introduction

part I|71 pages

Concepts

chapter 1|16 pages

Feminist exegesis and beyond

Trajectories in Muslima theology

chapter 2|13 pages

Islamic feminism by any other name

chapter 3|16 pages

Islam and feminism

German and European variations on a global theme

part II|96 pages

Sources

chapter 5|17 pages

Woman-man equality in creation

Interpreting the Qur’an from a nonpatriarchal perspective

chapter 7|17 pages

With ʿA’isha in mind

Reading Surat al-Nur through the Qur’an’s structural unity

chapter 8|30 pages

The Qur’anic turn of women’s image

From being the object to the subject of history

chapter 9|13 pages

Verse 4:34

Abjure symbolic violence, rebuff feminist partiality, or seek another hermeneutic?

part III|76 pages

Histories

chapter 10|19 pages

Umm Salama’s contributions

Qur’an, hadith, and early Muslim history as sources for gender justice

chapter 11|17 pages

Religious educated women in early Islam

Conceptions of women’s images in Arab-Islamic texts until the tenth century

chapter 12|16 pages

Challenging the authority of religious interpretation in Saudi Arabia

The transformation of Suhaila Zain al-Abedin Hammad

chapter 13|22 pages

Leading the way

Women’s activism, theology, and women’s rights in Southeast Asia