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This volume takes a global perspective on intersectionality embodied by Muslim women. It addresses questions such as balancing multiple identities, lived experiences and complex realities, and the role of faith in social roles. The chapters debunk the idea of Islam or gender being monoliths. They layer faith over gender across the globe and consider migration as an important factor, thereby exploring intersectional identities that are understudied and under-evaluated. The volume overall brings to life Islamic women's lives in all their richness and differences, with discussions on social roles, positions, initiatives, and occupations across regions. It provides recommendations and suggestions for readers to understand the complex realities of Muslim women as well as serves as a guide for practitioners and policy-makers.
Provides a truly global and interdisciplinary perspective Covers the latest research on lived experiences and living conditions of Muslim women Includes easy-to-read yet compelling articles to promote open discussion on issues faced by Muslim women
Auteur
Puspa Melati Wan holds a PhD in Sociology and Anthropology from the International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM) and is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Taylor's University, Malaysia. She earned her MSc in Sociology from the University of Oxford, UK, and her BA in Sociology and Psychology from the University of San Francisco, US. Identifying as a Clinical Sociologist, she is deeply passionate about community engagement. Puspa has collaborated with both local and international NGOs and has managed grassroots empowerment programs targeting various groups including women, with a focus on intersectionality. Puspa Melati Wan is the Honorary Secretary of Malaysian Social Science Association and the regional representative for ISA Research Committee Clinical Sociology (RC 46).
Saiqa Anne Qureshi, PhD, attended UC San Diego where she triple majored in Sociology, Political Science and History. Saiqa also holds a master's degree from Oxford as well as a PhD in Sociology, and an MBA from Imperial College London. She has teaching experiences in London, US and Canada. She is a highly sought after research management professional, with an extensive track record of publications and presentations.
Rosila Bee Mohd Hussain is an Associate Professor at the Department of Anthropology and Sociology, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur. She completed her PhD from The University of Western Australia. Her areas of research interest include social inequality, identity, youth, cross-cultural study and contemporary social issues (social capital, disability studies, gender and social threats). Her expert opinions on various sociological issues have often been shared on various media platforms like newspapers, talk shows and radio interviews in Malaysia. She has also completed and secured internal and external grants in the past years in relation to youth, social inequality and identity issues. Among others are UMRG (UM), FRGS (Malaysia), Ungku Aziz Centre for Development Studies and Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) as Research Collaborator. She has also published more than 50 journal articles, book chapters and proceedings from her research to share. Her current research work centers on social threats, lifestyle, and risk society.
Contenu
Introduction.- Part I The Label: Self Definition and Imposed Identities.- Beyond divorce: Unraveling the intersection of culture, religion, and agency in Minang Muslim women's lives.- Reading between the lines: Exploring the literary identities of selected Muslim women writers in Malaysia.- Feminism under the Islamic lens.- The imperfectly perfect rib; womenkind.- What's in a surname? The negotiation of identity among South African Muslim women after marriage.- Part II Presentation of the Self: Adjustment and the Digital Space.- Malay Muslim women digital being: Embracing changes or defying forces?.- Fight or flight response: The representation of a Muslim transgender woman's struggle in the Malaysian print media.- Names and identity: The changing norms of Muslim names.- Role of Social Media in Shaping Muslim Women's Religious Identities: The Case of a Muslim Nation.- The rift in belonging: Muslim female migrants in Kafir (Non-Muslim) societies.- Part III Agent of Change: Empowered and Resilient.- Resilience in Muslim Women Living with HIV: An Integrative Review.- Woman, Islamic, intellectual, activist and academic, in Brazil? A dialogue with Francirosy Campos Barbosa.- From Single Motherhood to Co-Parenthood: The Islamic Perspective on Amicable Divorce, Co-Parenting, and Post-Divorce Harmony.- Practising local wisdom of traditional medicine and healing among female pengobat (shaman) in Pulau Penyengat, Kepulauan Riau.- Part IV Conversion: Faith and Self Identity.- Between Tradition and Faith: Navigating Identity Transformations of Chinese Muslim Women in Malaysia and China.- Islam as Everyday Lived Religion: The Cases of Converted Japanese Muslim Women.- Filipino Women Converts to Islam: Their Identities and Life Choices.- Part V Basic Rights: Birth, Health and Employment.- Lived Experiences of Bangladeshi Muslim Female Migrant Workers in Malaysia.- The Impact of Arab Culture on the Practice of Violence Against Women in Libya.- Only Empowered Births Here! Malay-Muslim women's embodied experiences challenging discourses of the deviant Malay-Muslim Maternal Mother.- Muslim Women and Islamic perspective on Female Circumcision.- An autoethnographic analysis of clandestine breast cancer among Muslim women.