1st Edition

Gender and Self in Islam

By Etin Anwar Copyright 2007
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    Using philosophical analysis, this book explores the construction of gender in Muslim societies and its implication to the constitution of the self. The root of the existing discourse of the hierarchical principle is examined as is the extent to which the process of human reproduction, especially the role of women in conception, contributes to an anti-egalitarian theory of gender. The author analyzes the theological, cultural and political apparatus of the masculine conception of femininity and seeks to unfold the process of the alienation of the self from a woman’s sense of individuality, agency, and autonomy.

    Incorporating traditional Islamic sources, Western feminist texts and Christian texts, Gender and Self in Islam seeks to restructure the contradictory claims of gender hierarchy and egalitarianism and elaborate an alternative set of interpretations that is friendly and inclusive of women.

    1. Theories of Gender and their Qur'anic Foundation  2. Inclusive Humanity: Reinterpreting the Creation Theories in Islam  3. The Politics of Reproduction: Essentializing Women's Contribution to Conception  4. The Embodiment of Masculinity and Femininity: A Repeated Material Practice  5. Gender and Self: Between Association and Alienation

    Biography

    Etin Anwar is a lecturer at the State Institute of Islamic Studies Bandung and a research associate at Philosophy, Interpretation and Culture at Binghamton University, USA. She has published several articles on Ibn Sina, Meister Eckhart, Ibn Arabi, and women’s movements in Indonesia in journals including Islamic Studies, Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations, and Hawwa.