|aGendering religion and politics|h[electronic resource] :|buntanglingmodernities /|cedited by Hanna Herzog and Ann Braude ; associate editor, Pnina Steinberg.
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|a1st ed.
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|aNew York :|bPalgrave Macmillan ;|a[Jerusalem] :|bVan Leer Jerusalem Institute ;|a[Cambridge, Mass.] :|bWomen's Studies in Religion Program,Harvard Divinity School,|c2009.
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|ax, 297 p. :|bill. ;|c22 cm.
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|aIncludes bibliographical references and indexes.
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|aNativism and the politics of gender in Catholicism and Islam / Jose Casanova -- Imagined communities: state, religion, and gender in Jewishsettlements / Hanna Herzog -- Contemporary American Catholicism and the challenge of gender equality / Mary C. Segers -- From the Moabite Ruth to Norly the Filipino: intermarriage and conversion in the Jewish nation state / Daphna Hacker -- Seeking recognition: women's struggle for full citizenship in the community of religious worship / Pnina Lahav --"Subway women" and the American near east relief in Anatolia, 1919-1924 / Anat Lapidot-Pirilla -- Global sisterhood: transnational perspectives on gender and religion / Gertrud Huwelmeier -- Feminism,democracy, and empire: Islam and the war on terror / Saba Mahmood -- Patriarchal ecumenism, feminism, and women's religious experiences in Costa Rica / Elina Vuola -- The boundaries of liberation, the chains of freedom: urban women in 1960s Egyptian popular cinema / Shmulik Bachar -- Language, gender, and power in Morocco / Fatima Sadiqi.
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|aGendering Religion and Politics explores the multi-dimensional nature and inherently contingent qualities of modernity as they are revealedin the entwined relations between gender, religion, and politics. Evocative case studies by sociologists, historians, anthropologists, political scientists, and theologians situate the discussion in Muslim, Christian, and Jewish communities. Twelve outstanding scholars delve into the interconnections of religion, gender, and politics that lie beneath domestic and international conflicts. While previous studies portrayed religious women as passive or as relics of the past, these essays demonstrate their active roles in shaping modernity and untanglethe web of relations connecting women's religiosity to the political processes.
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|aElectronic reproduction.|bBasingstoke, England :|cPalgrave Macmillan,|d2009.|nMode of access:World Wide Web.|nSystem requirements: Web browser.|nTitle from title screen (viewed on Oct. 6, 2009).|nAccess may berestricted to users at subscribing institutions.