Recovering the Female Voice in Islamic Scripture

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A01=Georgina L. Jardim
Abdel Haleem
Abrahamic religions comparative study
abu
Abu Lahab
Ahl Al Bayt
amina
Amina Wadud
asma
Asma Barlas
Author_Georgina L. Jardim
barlas
Category=JBSF1
Category=QRP
characters
Classical Islamic Scholarship
Common Language
Early Makkan
El Sheikh
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
female agency in sacred texts
Feminist Literary Approach
gendered scriptural analysis
God Hears
Golden Bells
Islamic feminist hermeneutics
jacques
Jacques Jomier
lahab
Madinan Period
Makkan Period
Mohja Kahf
Muhammad's Career
Muhammad's Prophethood
Muhammad’s Career
Muhammad’s Prophethood
Mysterious Letters
Navid Kermani
prophetic narratives women
Qur'anic literary interpretation
reasoning
religious protest theory
scriptural
Social Reformation
Syrophoenician Woman
Traditional Islamic Scholarship
Vice Versa
wadud
Zelophehad's Daughters
Zelophehad’s Daughters

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472426376
  • Weight: 657g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Aug 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Protest is an activity not associated with the pious and collectively-minded, but more often seen as an activity of the liberal and rebellious. Judaism, Christianity and Islam are commonly understood as paragons of submission and obedience following Abraham’s example. Yet, the scriptures of all three faiths are founded in the prophets protesting wrongs in the social order. The Qur'an claims that men and women, and the relations between them are a sign from God. The question is to what extent are women silenced in the text, and do they share with men in shaping the prophetic scriptures? This book finds that far from silencing women, the Qur'an affirms the female voice as protester for justice and as questioner of Theology. In this reading of the female role in divine revelation in the Islamic text, Georgina Jardim returns to the scriptures of the Judeo-Christian counterpart of the Abrahamic faiths, to investigate whether the Bible may claim women as brokers of revelation. The result is an enriched understanding of divine communication in the Abrahamic scriptures and a commonplace for reasoning about the female voice as speaker in the Word of God.
Georgina L. Jardim read a PhD at the University of Gloucestershire, UK on obscure female characters in the Qur'an, bringing these conversations about community formation and the roles of women to bear on her study of the Qur'an as a Christian woman. She has taught in tertiary institutions in South Africa, and was a lecturer in Semitic languages at a Theological Seminary of the North West University in South Africa. She has also taught in the United Kingdom in both secondary and tertiary education and is currently pursuing ways to engage in, and further, cross-cultural dialogue within the Abrahamic religions.

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