Does Islam as a religion oppress women? Is Islam against democracy? In this classic study, internationally renowned sociologist Fatema Mernissi argues that women's oppression is not due to Islam because this religion celebrates women's power. Women's oppression, she maintains, is due to political manipulation of religion by power-seeking, archaic Muslim male elites. Mernissi explains that early Muslim scholars portrayed women as aggressive hunters who forced men, reduced to weak hunted victims, to control women by imposing institutions such as veiling, which confined women to the private space. In her new introduction, she argues that women's aggressive invasion of the 500-plus Arab satellite channels in the twenty-first century, including as commanding show anchors, film and video stars, supports her theory that Islam as a religion celebrates female power.
Scheherazade Goes West : Different Cultures, Different Harems
Fatema Mernissi
bookThe Antiracism Handbook : Practical Tools to Shift Your Mindset and Uproot Racism in Your Life and Community
Thema Bryant, PhD, Edith G. Arrington, PhD
audiobookIslams filosofihistoria : från Fitaghuras och Aflatun till Nasr och Ramadan
Klas Grinell
bookWomen and Gender in Islam
Leila Ahmed
audiobookThe Meaning of Surah 95 At-Teen The Figs Fruit (Higos Fruta) From Holy Quran Bilingual Edition English Spanish
Jannah Firdaus Mediapro
audiobookLaziness Does Not Exist
Devon Price
audiobookbookSolve For Happy : Engineer Your Path to Joy
Mo Gawdat
audiobookbookControl Your Emotions Bundle, 2 in 1 Bundle :The Emotion Code and Manage my Emotions
Oswald Niels, Lamar Hugh
audiobookMuslimsk feminist? Javisst!
Sarah Delshad
bookBoundaries for Leaders : Results, Relationships, and Being Ridiculously In Charge
Henry Cloud
audiobookCapital : Volume 1: A Critique of Political Economy
Karl Marx
audiobookUnstressable : A Practical Guide to Stress-Free Living
Mo Gawdat, Alice Law
audiobook