A constricting attitude towards the relationship between non-maram (marriageable) men and women is often either politically enforced or self-imposed in Muslim societies, with notions of separation and segregation upheld as normative ideals. This book challenges such interpretations, delineating a more permissive and nuanced position rooted in the Quran. Responding to the oft-held notion of men occupying the public sphere while women are restricted to the private, the book explores whether the Quran adopts a conception of gendered space and gendered roles.
The book analyses the various forms of malefemale interaction in the Quran, providing a comprehensive overview of gender relations and a critical dissection of restrictive readings. It also discusses clothing, offering a thorough overview of sartorial prescriptions in the Quran. Engaging with both classical and modern scholarship to provide a contextual reading, this book offers a comprehensive and expansive analysis of gender relations within a Quranic context.
Arvustused
Redhwan Karim's analysis of gender relations in the Qur'an offers a finely argued challenge to canonical Muslim interpretations of some verses as incontrovertibly male-privileging. He makes interesting and original contributions, which can help recuperate the Qur'ans universal ethical model for gender relationships. Hopefully, his book will be a powerful incentive for Muslims to do just that in their legal and moral reasoning. -- Asma Barlas, Ithaca College (Professor Emerita) This is a work of rigorous scholarship and analytical clarity. Through a careful engagement with the Quranic narrative, the author addresses the persistent question of whether the Quran mandates or assumes the seclusion of women. The result is an important and timely contribution to the study of gender in Islamic thought. This book is required read for anyone interested in what the Quran actually says about womens participation in public life. -- Khaled Abou El Fadl, UCLA A lucid and meticulously argued analysis of the Quran and foundational Islamic texts, Karim emphasizes female agency and probes overly restrictive interpretations of cross-gender interactions in Muslim sources. In addition to being a helpful classroom resource, the scholarship is valuable for specialists in gender studies and mandatory reading for those in positions of contemporary Islamic religious authority. -- Celene Ibrahim, Harvard University
Acknowledgements
Notes on Text
Table of Contents
Introduction: Framing Gender Relations in the Qur'n
1. Gendered Space: Rethinking Spatial Boundaries
2. Beyond the Private Sphere: Conceptualising Gendered Roles
3. Male-Female Interaction and the Ethics of Encounter
4. The Condition of Clothing
5. Desire, Deterrence and the Limits of Permissibility
Conclusion: Towards a Qur'nic Ethic of Gender Relations
Bibliography
F. Redhwan Karim is Senior Lecturer in Islamic Studies and Course Leader for the BA Islamic Studies program at the Markfield Institute of Higher Education. He is the editor of History of the Quran: Approaches and Explorations (2024), and has published under peer-reviewed in the Journal of Islamic and Muslim Studies, ReOrient: The Journal of Critical Muslim Studies, The Muslim World Review and the Journal of Islamic Ethics.