Gender and the Conceptualization of Religion and Islam

The critique of power asymmetries reproduced by Eurocentric and essentialist conceptualizations of generic terms and analytical concepts is well-established in religious studies and gender studies, especially when investigating Islam. Yet each discipline is in danger of omitting the most critical di...

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主要作者: Maltese, Giovanni 1981- (Author)
格式: 电子 文件
语言:English
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Interlibrary Loan:Interlibrary Loan for the Fachinformationsdienste (Specialized Information Services in Germany)
出版: 2023
In: Implicit religion
Year: 2021, 卷: 24, 发布: 3/4, Pages: 385-421
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Singapur / 期刊文章 / Geschichte 1940 / 宗教 / 概念化 / 伊斯兰教 / 基督教 / 性别比 / 历史 1870-1940
IxTheo Classification:AG Religious life; material religion
AX Inter-religious relations
BJ Islam
CA Christianity
KBM Asia
NBE Anthropology
NCF Sexual ethics
TJ Modern history
TK Recent history
Further subjects:B Feminism
B Gender Studies
B femininity / masculinity
B Islam and gender
B 1930s / 40s South and Southeast Asia
B Global Religious History
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总结:The critique of power asymmetries reproduced by Eurocentric and essentialist conceptualizations of generic terms and analytical concepts is well-established in religious studies and gender studies, especially when investigating Islam. Yet each discipline is in danger of omitting the most critical discussions of the other. Discussions about conceptualizations of religion and Islam, even those adapting theoretically sophisticated global history approaches, largely ignore gender. Scholars of gender studies, in turn, have barely queried or nuanced "religion" and "Islam" as categories. Thus, they fail to take into account how conceptualizations of religion and Islam as generic terms have affected the power relations under scrutiny. This article aims to address this momentous mutual exclusion by examining a tract published in 1940 in the context of Anglophone Southeast and South Asian Muslim intellectual circles. Drawing on Judith Butler’s critical engagement with Luce Irigaray and on Butler’s notion of subversion by thoroughgoing appropriation and redeployment and situating this case study within the mentioned mutual exclusion, I argue that studying the relation between concepts of femininity and masculinity and concepts of religion and Islam poses important questions regarding colonial, androcentric, and phallogocentric epistemologies underlying contemporary religious studies and gender studies. I contend that religion-making and gender-making should not be investigated apart from each other.
ISSN:1743-1697
Contains:Enthalten in: Implicit religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1558/imre.23274