Gender
Leila Ahmed's 1992 book Women and Gender in Islam: Historical Roots of a Modern Debate is divided into three parts. One is devoted to the pre-Islamic Middle East including Mesopotamia and the Mediterranean. This background section provides an historical and cultural context that is often omitted from discourse on gender and Islam. The second section of Women and Gender in Islam is on the founding discourses, and encompasses the period from the beginning and Muhammad to the Medieval era of Islam and its spread throughout the Mediterranean world. The last part of Ahmed's book is entitled "New Discourses," and it bridges the gaps between past and future, and between the Muslim and non-Muslim worlds. Ahmed's thesis in Women and Gender in Islam is multifaceted. The author suggests that the multiple and heterogeneous discourses on the subject of gender in Islam must be taken into consideration of their cultural and historical contexts. Moreover, Ahmed presents the scope of gender and Islam within a broader political context. The author affirms that gender raises "complicated questions" and that the history of women in Islam is more "kaleidoscopic" than straightforward (Ahmed, 1992, p. 4-5).
Much of Women and Gender in Islam is exploratory in nature, but the arguments are substantiated with fact and scholarly research. One of the elements of support lending credence to Ahmed's argument is that Islam, like Christianity, borrowed from and blended with the "earlier and adjoining societies" it would later influence...
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