Fundamentalism and Women in World Religions
By (Author) Arvind Sharma
Edited by Katherine K. Young
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
T.& T.Clark Ltd
1st November 2008
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
200.82
Paperback
224
This collection of essays by internationally renowned women scholars both contests the notion of fundamentalism and attempts to find places where it might convege with women's roles in the various world's religions. The essayists explore fundamentalism as a system or method of limiting women's religious roles and examine the ways that women embrace certain aspects of fundamentalism. The essays cover Hinduism, Buddhism, Confuciansim, Islam, Judaism, and Christianity.
The contributors investigate the ways that women "fight back" against fundamentalist conceptions of family, gender roles, doctrinal practices, ritual practices, and God or theistic constructs. The writers reassert and preserve their identities by challenging the static categories of fundamentalism. The essays contain deep and powerful explorations of the intersections of culture, religion, and feminism.
Mention -Book News, February 2009
Arvind Sharma is Birks Professor of Comparative Religion at McGill University, Canada. Arvind Sharma has been a member of the faculty of Religious Studies at McGill University since 1987. He has held fellowships at the Center for the Study of World Religions, the Center for the Study of Values in Public Life, and the Center for Business and Government, John F. Kennedy School of Government, at Harvard University, and at the Brookings Institute. He also received a Maxwell Fellowship and was elected Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society, London. He is the author of Are Human Rights Western (2006) and Religious Studies and Comparative Methodology (2005). Katherine K. Young is James McGill Professor at McGill University, Canada.