2001
DOI: 10.1525/can.2001.16.2.202
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Feminist Theory, Embodiment, and the Docile Agent: Some Reflections on the Egyptian Islamic Revival

Abstract: In the last two decades one of the key questions that has occupied many feminist theorists is how should issues of historical and cultural specificity inform both the analytics and politics of any feminist project. Although this questioning has resulted in serious attempts at integrating issues of sexual, racial, class, and national difference within feminist theory, questions of religious difference have remained relatively unexplored in this scholarship. The vexed relationship between feminism and religious … Show more

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Cited by 894 publications
(507 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
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“…Milk is contaminated during handling, storage and processing. Mahmood et al, (2001) collected 400 samples of milk in Faisalabad and when study was carried out there is 7.5% of listeria species were isolated in which 2.25% of listeria monocytogenes. Here, the prevalence rate of this study is very low as compare to this study results which was 13.6%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Milk is contaminated during handling, storage and processing. Mahmood et al, (2001) collected 400 samples of milk in Faisalabad and when study was carried out there is 7.5% of listeria species were isolated in which 2.25% of listeria monocytogenes. Here, the prevalence rate of this study is very low as compare to this study results which was 13.6%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in recent years, we have seen a move away from scholarly concern with such radial political transformation. This shift is partly a result of the development of scholarly interest in everyday forms of resistance (Scott 1985) and its critiques (Abu Lughod 1990;Mahmood 2001;Ortner 1995), as well as in the field that lies between mass revolution and small scale resistancesocial movements, 'direct action' or 'dissent'. This shift has led some scholars to argue that the old dream of total transformation may have faded in recent years (for example, Fox and Starn 1997).…”
Section: An Anthropology Of Revolutionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mahmood (2001), from her study with Pietist women in Cairo, updated the discussion on the use of the term habitus in this path. Habitus here means an acquired aptitude in which body, mind, and emotions are simultaneously trained to attain competence in something through repetition.…”
Section: Negotiating the Construction Of The Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%