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Women in Middle Eastern History: Shifting Boundaries in Sex and Gender » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of Women in Middle Eastern History: Shifting Boundaries in Sex and Gender by Nikki R. Keddie

Authors: Nikki R. Keddie (Editor), Beth Baron
ISBN-13: 9780300056976, ISBN-10: 0300056974
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Yale University Press
Date Published: July 1993
Edition: 1st Edition

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Author Biography: Nikki R. Keddie

Book Synopsis

This history of Middle Eastern women is the first to survey gender relations in the Middle East from the earliest Islamic period to the present. Outstanding scholars analyze a rich array of sources ranging from histories, biographical dictionaries, law books, prescriptive treatises, and archival records, to the Traditions (hadith) of the Prophet and imaginative works like the Thousand and One Nights, to modern writings by Middle Eastern women and by Western writers. They show that gender boundaries in the Middle East have been neither fixed nor immutable: changes in family patterns, religious rituals, socio-economic necessity, myth and ideology - and not least, women's attitudes - have expanded or circumscribed women's roles and behavior through the ages.

Publishers Weekly

Combining scholarship and theory, these essays are loosely organized to concentrate on the early Islamic centuries, the Mamluk period (1250-1517) and the modern age (essentially the 18th century through the 1980s). The authors generally focus on the subject of ``gender boundaries'' in order to demonstrate the changing position of women in Middle Eastern society. Because the region is culturally diverse and the span of time considered is vast, the collection remains miscellaneous, providing detailed studies of endowment deeds in late medieval Egypt and textile manufacturing in the Bursa factories during the 19th century but leaving enormous gaps. Much of the writing is awkward and overburdened with jargon. One bright spot is Paula Sanders's ``Gendering the Ungendered Body: Hermaphrodites in Medieval Islamic Law,'' a marvelous study of medieval Muslim jurists' struggle to incorporate the hermaphrodite in a world where the boundaries between male and female were strictly delineated. Keddie is the author of Roots of Revolution ; Baron teaches history at New York City College. (Feb.)

Table of Contents

Preface
Organization of the Volume
1Introduction: Deciphering Middle Eastern Women's History1
2Islam and Patriarchy: A Comparative Perspective23
IThe First Islamic Centuries
3Political Action and Public Example: Aisha and the Battle of the Camel45
4Early Islam and the Position of Women: The Problem of Interpretation58
5Gendering the Ungendered Body: Hermaphrodites in Medieval Islamic Law74
IIThe Mamluk Period
6Manners and Customs of Fourteenth-Century Cairene Women: Female Anarchy versus Male Shari Order in Muslim Prescriptive Treatises99
7Class Solidarity versus Gender Gain: Women as Custodians of Property in Later Medieval Egypt122
8Women and Islamic Education in the Mamluk Period143
IIIModern Turkey and Iran
9Ottoman Women, Households, and Textile Manufacturing, 1800-1914161
10The Impact of Legal and Educational Reforms on Turkish Women177
11The Dynamics of Women's Spheres of Action in Rural Iran195
12Political Roles of Aliabad Women: The Public-Private Dichotomy Transcended215
IVThe Modern Arab World
13Ties That Bound: Women and Family in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Nablus233
14The House of Zainab: Female Authority and Saintly Succession in Colonial Algeria254
15The Making and Breaking of Marital Bonds in Modern Egypt275
16Artists and Entrepreneurs: Female Singers in Cairo during the 1920s292
17Biography and Women's History: On Interpreting Doria Shafik310
List of Contributors335
Index337

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