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Book Reviews

GloBal islamic Feminisms


by Mahruq F. Khan

Jamillah Karim, AMERICAN MUSLIM WOMEN: NEGOTIATING RACE, CLASS AND GENDER WITHIN
THE UMMAH. New York: New York University Press, 2009. 303p. notes. bibl. gloss. index. pap., $23.00, ISBN 978-
0814748107.

Faegheh Shirazi, VELVET JIHAD: MUSLIM WOMENS QUIET RESISTANCE TO ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM.
Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2009 (pap., 2011). 288p. notes. bibl. index. $65.00, ISBN 978-0813033549;
pap., $29.95, ISBN 978-0813037301.

Margot Badran, FEMINISM IN ISLAM: SECULAR AND RELIGIOUS CONVERGENCES. Oxford, UK: Oneworld
Publications, 2009. 358p. $29.95, ISBN 978-1851685561.

S ome secular feminists may argue culture of silence and deference to pa- Islam the Quranic laws and the tra-
that religion serves as an impediment triarchal traditions, interpretations, and ditions and practices of Muhammad.
to real social change. Sociologists of authorities; and, by doing so, to gain Muslim women have long argued that
religion have observed, however, that equal access for women to the same the secular pursuit of gender equality
many religious activists use their faith symbolic roles, spaces, and opportuni- denies women their right to femininity,
to promote gender equality and justice. ties as for men. devalues their role as domestic provid-
In fact, believers can use religion in ers, and makes motherhood into an
seemingly contradictory ways to foster Some research on Muslim femi- unpaid burden rather than a reward-
an inclusive community. On the one nism in the West is already under way ing pursuit.6 The feminism they seek
hand, they can use its spiritual dimen- in the fields of religious studies and demands respect for women and offers
sions to help gain critical distance from gender studies. It has been noted that them the opportunity of education,
the status quo and imagine alterna- Islamic feminism encompasses a broad the option for independent and gain-
tives to it.1 Some scholars posit that range of issues and endeavors, includ- ful employment in the workplace, and
those religious movements that seek ing poetry, domestic violence, political an honored Islamic space in the home
to expand the purview of individual participation, female circumcision, for those who choose to become wives,
religious autonomy have the greatest literacy, social class, the veil, appro- mothers, and homemakers.7 Feminist
potential for increasing religions social priation of the written word, and legal discourse among Muslim women also
significance in society as a whole.2 In equality.4 It has been further pointed often occurs within the context of in-
societies like the U.S., on the other out that the gender jihad undercuts ternational organizations and transna-
hand, where social bonds between indi- the male dominance of Islamic leader- tional feminist networks.8 Below, I will
viduals are on the wane, religion can be ship, as women have created a female examine the coverage of Islamic femi-
used to form social networks and ties presence in the public space of the nisms and discourse within the three
between individuals that may or may Muslim community as well as in the texts listed at the top of this essay.
not have otherwise formed.3 divine space of orthodox Islamic theol-
Within Muslim communities, ogy and exegesis.5 F aegheh Shirazi organizes Velvet
feminists are building an intellectual In the wider context of revival- Jihad: Muslim Womens Quiet Resistance
solidarity that embraces and accepts ism, Muslim women have also recon- to Islamic Fundamentalism according
the legitimacy of a multiplicity of structed their own grand narrative of to key gender-based social phenomena
thoughts, beliefs, and behaviors Islam and the rights it has accorded to that Muslim women and girls face,
none more religiously authoritative its women. They have used the theo- especially in predominantly Muslim
than the next. Despite their diver- logical basis of Islam to carve their own societies and to a lesser extent in non-
gences, these endeavors share common path toward freedom. Their arguments Muslim societies: honor and virginity,
goals: to undermine the hegemonic have been anchored in the teachings of fertility (and infertility), dress codes,

Feminist Collections (v. 32, nos. 34, SummerFall 2011) Page 1


Book Reviews

gender role transgression, gender pref- Following this, she succinctly explains grassroots organizations are resisting
erence, and the body as subject. She the way women are expected to pre- restrictions against women and pro-
begins by examining how changing so- serve the honor of their families and moting their empowerment, and by
cial factors like technology, education, take responsibility over their bodies exposing cultural paradoxes that Iran
and human rights discourses contribute vis--vis purity rituals. She is careful to faces in response to contraception and
to this velvet jihad, and she observes acknowledge not only that men police HIV/AIDS research, she keeps the con-
that this feminist reclamation of the women, but also that women, unfortu- versation timely and relevant. Finally,
gender-egalitarian roots of Islam explic- nately, are often complicit in the honor and perhaps most interestingly, Shirazi
itly differentiates the core teachings of killings of their female relatives. This brings attention to the recent appear-
the faith from patriarchal culture. social reality, Shirazi says, underscores ance of hijab-donning dolls for young
the pervasive perception that women Muslim girls. For some, these dolls
are the property of men (and of more serve as symbols or reminders of ap-
powerful women) and that family dis- propriate attire and the importance of
putes are often resolved through per- adhering to prescribed dress codes. Sur-
sonal violence, not through the courts. prisingly, many of these hijab-donning
Particularly effective is Shirazis dolls are purchased by more educated
incorporation of the internationally women who seek to instill particular
renowned case of Mukhtaran Mai, who norms and values in their daughters.
spoke out after she was gang-raped in Overall, the topics explored in
Pakistan as punishment for the alleged Velvet Jihad are quite accessible to a
misdeeds of her young brother. By wide range of readers and provide a
highlighting women who demonstrate fascinating cross-cultural survey of the
agency, courage, and resilience in this aforementioned subjects.
and other contemporary examples,
Shirazi successfully debunks the com-
monly held belief that Muslim women
are helpless victims. Although many of
the cultural examples she employs stem
from predominantly Muslim societies,
she traces some misogynistic practices
to pre-Islam and to other countries
where Muslims are the minority.
I n her discussion of honor and For readers seeking religious argu-
virginity, Shirazi examines the social ments either supporting or opposing
construction of womens bodies, how mainstream positions on gender issues
these bodies have reflected gendered such as virginity, Shirazi incorporates
interactions, and their manifesta- interpretations of Islamic law and
tions within different realms of social Quranic verses alongside her own per-
and political life. Among the many sonal commentary. In addition, she
strengths of this discussion are the wide makes the legal discussion of virginity
range of international contexts and more accessible by illustrating how par-
the examples of rape used as a weapon ticular international news sources have
of war. Shirazi states in quite certain responded to the topic within their
terms, A womans status defines the national boundaries.
status of all the men who are related In the rest of Velvet Jihad, Shirazi
to her in determinate ways. In this explores the subjects of infertility, dolls W hereas Shirazi spans many
respect, these men all share the conse- as cultural expression, art, and gen- Muslim societies responses to a limited
quences of what happens to her, and der preference. On each subject, her set of gender-based issues, Jamillah
therefore they share the commitment analysis of news media discussions of Karim focuses more narrowly in Ameri-
to protect her chastity and virtue, since these social problems remains strong can Muslim Women: Negotiating, Race,
she belongs to their patrimony (p. 30). and critical. By showing how current Class, and Gender within the Ummah,

Page 2 Feminist Collections (v. 32, nos. 34, SummerFall 2011)


Book Reviews

exploring the tenuous relationship are still geographically and socially con- cities also provides insight into the role
between African American and South nected to poor blacks.9 The shadow of that cities play in motivating womens
AsianAmerican Muslims in Chicago anti-black and anti-immigrant racism movements. Poverty rates for African
and Atlanta, and looking in depth at in political discourse follows the wom- Americans in Atlanta are high, but this
interactions between Muslim women en that Karim interviews and the eth- city also has a higher number of edu-
from these two racial categories. nic boundaries that they construct be- cated African Americans than Chicago
Karim employs the Islamic con- tween one another. Through this lens, does and more who live in the sub-
cept of ummah, which implies a shared Karim observes that many mainstream urbs and are thus able to interact more
religious identity within a unified immigrant-run Muslim organizations directly with South AsianAmerican
community, and argues for the need to neglect to include the pressing needs of Muslims. Karim also posits that in At-
recognize the existence of the multiple African American Muslims. lanta, women transform mosque space
ummahs or social networks within through their sheer numbers, since
which Muslims reside and engage. Her many more African American Muslim
focus on multiple contexts is situated women in Atlanta frequent mosques
within a broader discussion of the than do their counterparts in Chicago.
geographic distance between African American Muslim Women con-
American and South AsianAmerican cludes with an emphasis on how the
Muslims, especially in hyper-segregated struggles between the two groups of
cities like Chicago. This physical dis- Muslim women are often compounded
tance leads to divergent intellectual, by members of the older generation
social, and symbolic spaces that women who remain wary of one another.
within these two communities often Many African American Muslim wom-
experience. Another common thread is en cite the difficulty they face in being
the notion of global flows, referring accepted by the parents of their South
not only to the flow of people between Asian friends. The university setting is
places but also to the flow of informa- often where these young women (and
tion and access across racial and gender men) meet and transcend the racial
lines. The intersections of race, gender, divides of their parents communities.
religion and class are central to Karims Inter-ethnic marriage can result, often
thesis. as an explicit act of resistance against
Drawing upon ethnographic data, the rigid gendered and racial expecta-
including rich interviews and conversa- tions of their parents generation.
tions, American Muslim Women is inter- In sum, Karims ethnographic
spersed with narratives and vignettes. Karim first explains the underpin- research is best suited for graduate
The author clearly defines her own nings of the disconnect between the students as well as non-academic audi-
social location as an educated African two groups of women, but she later ences. It is not theory-laden and reads
American Muslim woman and explains highlights the factors that give rise to quite easily, but provides the rich detail
the role her background played in a level of connection or familiarity for that a student of ethnography and
shaping the experiences and relation- some women. She argues that some methodology would particularly ap-
ships that she built before and during progressive women transcend their preciate.
her research. ethnic bounds in their pursuit of an Shifting to a more historical
Karim begins with the claim that idealized, racially harmonious um- analysis of Islamic feminism, Margot
race continues to operate as the pri- mah, or out of a humanitarian desire Badran, who has been studying rise of
mary power construct, not just in the to bridge racial divides. In discussing the feminist consciousness in Egypt
relationships between these women, these boundary transgressions, Karim since the 1960s, compiles a series
but also in ethnic relations at large. She emphasizes the multiple locations that of her previously written articles in
follows with engaging research detail- Muslim women occupy and the ways Feminism in Islam: Secular and Religious
ing the average household income for in which race and religion compound Convergences. Badran organizes these
blacks, whites, South Asians, and Lati- the sexism they face. essays into two parts, beginning with
nos, reinforcing Mary Patillo-McCoys Comparing the relationships be- several focused on the first hundred
earlier findings that middle-class blacks tween these two groups in two U.S. years of feminism in Egypt from the

Feminist Collections (v. 32, nos. 34, SummerFall 2011) Page 3


Book Reviews

late nineteenth through the end of the The chapter on gender activism 5. Hibba Abugideri, Hagar: A His-
twentieth century. This first half exam- in Egypt draws upon numerous inter- torical Model for Gender Jihad, in
ines the interconnection between the views with middle-class feminists in the Daughters of Abraham, eds. Yvonne
feminisms that emerged in Egypt and late 1980s, following a different model Haddad & John Esposito (Gainesville:
nationalist ideologies, without privileg- from the rest of the weighty text, which University Press of Florida, 2001).
ing either discourse, as well as a range reads largely as a comprehensive histo-
of issues related to womens bodies and ry, providing the theoretical, political, 6. Leila Ahmed, Women and Gender
sexuality, including female genital cut- and religious basis of the development in Islam: Historical Roots of a Modern
ting; and discusses how Islamic and of Islamic feminisms in the Middle Debate (New Haven: Yale Univer-
secular feminist frameworks approach East, Africa, and South Asia. sity Press, 1993); Zahra Rahnavard,
the subject. The second half of the Feminism in Islam would most Women, Islam, and Feminism, in
compilation goes beyond Egypt, exam- benefit advanced area-studies students The Journal of Foreign Policy, v. 9, no. 2
ining Islamic feminism in other parts or scholars in their understanding of (Summer 1995).
of the Muslim world, such as Turkey, the divergent forms of Islamic femi-
Yemen, and Nigeria, where patriarchal nism within particular cultural con- 7. Haleh Afshar & Mary Maynard,
laws are enacted. texts. Gender and Ethnicity at the Millen-
Badran qualifies her discussion nium: From Margin to Centre, in
with the proclamation that one can Notes Ethnic and Racial Studies, v. 23, no. 5
indeed be Muslim and a feminist, (2000), pp. 805819.
while acknowledging the ongoing 1. Robert N. Bellah, The Ritual Roots
orientalist discourse that undermines of Society and Culture, in Handbook 8. Deniz Kandiyoti, ed., Contempo-
that seemingly oppositional identity. of Sociology of Religion (Cambridge, rary Feminist Scholarship and Middle
She also argues that feminism among UK: Cambridge University Press, East Studies, in Gendering the Middle
Muslim women is indigenous not a 2003). East: Emerging Perspectives (New York:
byproduct of Western feminism and Syracuse University Press, 1996);
that Western feminists also can trace 2. See, in particular, Mark Chaves & Valentine Moghadam, Gender and
the roots of their own feminism to reli- Laura Stephens, Church Attendance National Identity: Women and Politics
gious women, even though those roots in the United States, in Handbook of in Muslim Societies, ed. by Valentine
are not widely recognized. Sociology of Religion (Cambridge, UK: Moghadam (London, UK: Zed Books,
The line between secular and Cambridge University Press, 2003). 1994).
religious feminism is often blurred,
Badran believes, since women rarely 3. Richard Wood, Religion, Faith- 9. Mary Pattillo-McCoy, Black Picket
work strictly from within either frame- Based Community Organizing, and Fences: Privilege and Peril among the
work. She provides ample historical the Struggle for Justice, in Handbook Black Middle Class (Chicago: Univer-
detail, citing numerous figures, local of Sociology of Religion (Cambridge, sity of Chicago Press, 1999).
organizations, and dates as she traces UK: Cambridge University Press,
Islamic feminism within particular 2003). [Mahruq F. Khan is an assistant professor
moments, especially throughout twen- of womens, gender, and sexuality studies
tieth-century Egypt; and she supplies 4. Elizabeth W. Fernea, In Search of at the University of WisconsinLa Crosse.
much-needed nuance on the many Islamic Feminism: One Womans Global She teaches courses in womens diversity,
forms of Islamic feminisms as they Journey (New York: Doubleday Dell, LGBT studies, globalization, and human
interact with competing agendas of the 1998). rights. Her research focuses on LGBT
state. and/or feminist Muslims in the West.]

Page 4 Feminist Collections (v. 32, nos. 34, SummerFall 2011)


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