Revisited: Muslim Women's agency and feminist anthropology of the Middle East
Feminist theory
05 social sciences
Muslim women
0506 political science
desire
Agency
anthropology of the Middle East
5. Gender equality
feminist theory
Desire
agency
Anthropology of the Middle East
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
DOI:
10.17863/cam.13768
Publication Date:
2017-09-23
AUTHORS (1)
ABSTRACT
This article locates imaginative aspects of human subjectivity as a feminist issue by reviewing the concept of agency in the genealogy of Muslim and Middle Eastern women in anthropological and ethnographic literature. It suggests that, if feminist scholarship of the Middle East would continue approaching to Muslim women’s agency -as it has been doing for decades-, it should do so as an epistemological question and thus expand the limits of ethnographic and analytical focus beyond the broader systems, such as family, nation, religion, and state. As an example to this proposition, the article then discusses the recent work on aspects of selfhood that escape from the structures, rules, systems, and discursive limits of life but captures imaginations, aspirations, desires, yearnings, and longings.
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