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<title>BDI Working Paper 2 (Pathways of Women's Empowerment Programme)</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10361/1529</link>
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<dc:date>2013-05-19T00:08:45Z</dc:date>
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<title>Religion and muslim women: trajectories of empowerment</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/10361/1530</link>
<description>Religion and muslim women: trajectories of empowerment
Huq, Samia; Khondaker, Sahida Islam
The report is based on a two‐year research project in which we looked at&#13;
women’s everyday engagement with religion. We aimed to gain insights into how&#13;
women conceptualize religion, the norms and concepts through which they&#13;
understand what it means to be religious and the manner in which these&#13;
concepts and ideals are brought to bear on the construction of the feminine self.&#13;
The research focused on three arenas of women’s understanding of themselves&#13;
as women and Muslim. These arenas are purdah, sexuality ‐ by which we mean&#13;
male female relations ‐ and freedom and rights. From the research findings we&#13;
argue that women have moved towards a textually‐based learning and&#13;
interpretation of Islam, as opposed to engaging with Islam as a form of&#13;
knowledge passed down from earlier generations. We also found that, in line with&#13;
the need to “authenticate” beliefs, women express much respect for taleem ‐&#13;
spaces where women congregate to learn about the Quran and other exegetical&#13;
material as well as ideal Islamic comportment. From the findings we argue that&#13;
the role of religion in women’s lives cannot be understood through the binary of&#13;
religious/conservative versus secular/liberal. Rather, by exploring the norms&#13;
through which women understand religion and deploy corporeal as well as noncorporeal&#13;
capacities to engage with those norms in “living” Islam we can shed&#13;
light on greater nuances that under gird religious engagement. We then turn our&#13;
attention to the negotiations theses nuances represent and how they open up&#13;
questions about the “contentious” relationship between women, religion, agency&#13;
and empowerment.
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<dc:date>2011-06-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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