Gender hierarchy in the Qurʼān : medieval interpretations, modern responses / Karen Bauer.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- 9781107041523 (hardback)
- 297.12283053 23
- BP134.S49 B38 2015
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | |
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Reformational Study Centre General library | 297.12283053 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available |
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297.12267 Islam, the Ancient near East and Varieties of Godlessness : | 297.1228 PARR Jezus in de Koran / | 297.1228 PARR Jezus in de Koran / | 297.12283053 Gender hierarchy in the Qurʼān : | 297.1229 BAID Baidawi's commentary on Surah 12 of the Qur'an | 297.124106 PARS Understanding Muslim teachings and traditions : | 297.14 JUYN Handleiding tot de kennis van de mohammedaansche wet volgens de sjâfiʻitische leer der school |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"This book explores how medieval and modern Muslim religious scholars ('ulamā') interpret gender roles in Qur'ā;nic verses on legal testimony, marriage, and human creation. Citing these verses, medieval scholars developed increasingly complex laws and interpretations upholding a male-dominated gender hierarchy; aspects of their interpretations influence religious norms and state laws in Muslim-majority countries today, yet other aspects have been discarded entirely. Karen Bauer traces the evolution of their interpretations, showing how they have been adopted, adapted, rejected, or replaced over time, by comparing the Qur'ān with a wide range of Qur'ānic commentaries and interviews with prominent religious scholars from Iran and Syria. At times, tradition is modified in unexpected ways: learned women argue against gender equality, or Grand Ayatollahs reject sayings of the Prophet, citing science instead. This innovative and engaging study highlights the effects of social and intellectual contexts on the formation of tradition, and on modern responses to it"--
"This book explores how medieval and modern Muslim religious scholars ('ulamā') interpret gender roles in Qur'ānic verses on legal testimony, marriage, and human creation. Citing these verses, medieval scholars developed increasingly complex laws and interpretations upholding a male-dominated gender hierarchy; aspects of their interpretations influence religious norms and state laws in Muslim-majority countries today, yet other aspects have been discarded entirely. Karen Bauer traces the evolution of these interpretations, showing how they have been adopted, adapted, rejected, or replaced over time, by comparing the Qurʼān with a wide range of Qur'ānic commentaries and interviews with prominent religious scholars from Iran and Syria. At times, tradition is modified in unexpected ways: learned women argue against gender equality, or Grand Ayatollahs reject sayings of the Prophet, citing science instead. This innovative and engaging study highlights the effects of social and intellectual contexts on the formation of tradition, and on modern responses to it"--