Muslim Feminisms: In and Against the Islam/Secular Dichotomy

Muslim Feminisms: In and Against the Islam/Secular Dichotomy

October is Islamic History Month in Canada and you are cordially invited to this year’s lecture sponsored by the ECMC Chair in Islamic Studiesthe Department of Political ScienceEdmonton Council of Muslim Communities, and the Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies (MEIS) research group:

Public Talk by Amina Jamal
Associate Professor of Sociology at Ryerson University 

When: Thursday October 21, 2021 6:00 PM – 7:30 PM (Edmonton time)
Where: Online Zoom Webinar. For registration please CLICK HERE.

Abstract
In many Western societies including Canada, Muslim women are seen to be perpetually trapped in a conflict between Islamic oppression versus Secular emancipation. This is a systemic form of Islamophobia that not only restrains Muslim women’s rights and access to services but may also motivate random acts of violence against Muslim bodies and the spaces that they inhabit. In this talk I want to draw attention to the scholarly, political and affective implications of framing Muslim women’s identities and political struggles within rigid and exclusionary constructions of religious/secular. Like all social actors, Muslim women negotiate with a heterogeneity of discourses of power, multiplicity of feelings and contending desires that constitute the very texture of Muslim lives and of their faith. I draw upon my interviews with Muslim feminists in Pakistan, India and Canada to argue that Muslim women’s collective politics and individual self-construction are responses to both disciplinary forms of secularism and bureaucratic constructions of faith. In particular I discuss Muslim women’s Feminism as an affectively lived and embodied activism that operates both In and Against the Islam/secular dichotomy to challenge Islamophobia, racial and gender oppression, as well as patriarchal dominance.

Bio
Amina Jamal is Associate Professor of Sociology at Ryerson University, Toronto. She has authored a monograph, Jamaat-e-Islami Women in Pakistan: Vanguard of a New Modernity? She writes in the areas of women, Islam and modernity, transnational and postcolonial feminism, violence against women and Muslim women’s struggles in Pakistan and Canada. Dr. Jamal ‘s research highlights the new types of citizen-subjects that are emerging from the complex interplay of gender, race, religion and sexuality with changing global economic, political and cultural relations. She is presently investigating the dilemmas of feminist and progressive Muslim politics and poetics in South Asia which are threatened by diverse hegemonic discourses and multiple forms of violence emanating from local, national and global interests.

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