ABSTRACT

This is a study of Chinese Hui Muslim women's historic and unrelenting spiritual, educational, political and gendered drive for an institutional presence in Islamic worship and leadership: 'a mosque of one's own' as a unique feature of Chinese Muslim culture. The authors place the historical origin of women's segregated religious institutions in the Chinese Islamic diaspora's fight for survival, and in their crucial contribution to the cause of ethnic/religious minority identity and solidarity. Against the presentation of complex historical developments of women's own site of worship and learning, the authors open out to contemporary problems of sexual politics within the wider society of socialist China and beyond to the history of Islam in all its cultural diversity.

part I|31 pages

Introduction

chapter I|29 pages

A Mosque Of Their Own

Muslim Women, Chinese Islam and Sexual Equality

part II|86 pages

From the Margins of Memory

chapter II|33 pages

Scholarly Debates

Islamic Faith, Innovation (bid'a) and Constructs of Femininity

part III|57 pages

Women's Mosques, Nu Ahong and their Religious Culture

part IV|81 pages

Claiming Heaven

chapter VIII|32 pages

Between Allah and Modernity

Re/Engendering the Past

chapter X|21 pages

The Feminisation of Purgatory

Mediating Spiritual Faith and Equality

part V|45 pages

Chinese Muslim Women: Communitas, Choices, and Conversion

chapter XII|28 pages

Lives and Testimonies

Living in God's Shadow