This book explores the adversarial world of feminist activism by Muslim women within highly mediated environments (social media, screenwriting, documentary filmmaking, YouTube), focusing on agency, bodily integrity, and familial obligations. It highlights how adversarial Islamic feminism uses social media to spread intersectional feminist messages, creating virtual communities that both support and challenge these ideas. The book showcases the diversity within Islamic practices and the lived experiences of women beyond the gatekeeping authoritative interpretations of Sunni Islamic theology. It presents adversarial Islamic feminism as existing in a "borderland" between Islam and feminism, questioning and reshaping their confluence. This space allows for a vibrant dialogue that bridges Western and Islamic feminist perspectives, offering a new view on the intersection of these identities.
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Introduction
- 1 El Saadawi’s Dissident Feminist Project: Legacy of a Double Struggle, for Gender Justice and against Imperialism
- 2 Reform and Utopia in Canadian Islamic Feminism: The Contradictory Project of Irshad Manji
- 3 Mona Eltahawy: Adversarial Islamic Feminism Within the Western-Islamic Public Sphere
- 4 Halla Diyab’s Adversarial Feminism: Between Islam and Secularity, Between Power and Resistance, Between Syria and England
- 5 Waad Al-Kateab’s For Sama: Cinematic Islamic Feminism and the Female War Gaze
- 6 Deeyah Khan’s Radical Care: Vulnerability and Border Inside Global, Mediatized Intersectional Feminism
- Conclusions
- Index