1st Edition

'Muslim Woman'/Muslim women Lived Experiences beyond Religion and Gender in South Asia and Its Diasporas

Edited By Patricia Jeffery, Kaveri Qureshi Copyright 2025
138 Pages
by Routledge

138 Pages
by Routledge

138 Pages
by Routledge

This book addresses South Asian Muslim women’s lived experiences, whilst questioning dominant concepts of agency. Negative, homogenising constructions of the ‘Muslim Woman’ are not the result of a knowledge deficit, but constitutive of Euro-American and Hindu nationalist forms of civilizational self-assurance. Portraying the richness and diversity of Muslim women’s voices and agency cannot,... Read more

Introduction – ‘Muslim Woman’/Muslim women: Lived experiences beyond religion and gender in South Asia and its diasporas

Patricia Jeffery and Kaveri Qureshi

 

1. Muslim daughters and inheritance in India: Sharīcat custom and practice

Sylvia Vatuk

 

2. Courting agency: Gender and divorce in an English sharia council

Kaveri Qureshi

 

3. Muslim marriages, the South African state and the courts: Between limbo, liberation, and the spaces for contestation in-between

Goolam Vahed

 

4. Being seen: The political and bureaucratic entanglements of Muslim women in West Bengal

Lexi Stadlen

 

5. Gendering the everyday state: Muslim women, claim-making & brokerage in India

Ayesha Ansari and Thomas Chambers

 

6. Life, labour, and dreams: One woman’s life in Old Delhi

Kalyani Devaki Menon

 

7. Emotions, identity and the entrepreneurial self: Narratives of working Muslim women in rural India

Syeda Asia

 

8. Migration, patriarchy and ‘modern’ Islam: Views from left behind wives in rural northern Bangladesh

Marzana Kamal

 

Biography

Patricia Jeffery’s research focuses on gender politics in South Asia. Her publications include Frogs in a Well (1979) and Confronting Saffron Demography (2006). Routledge is publishing two further books that address demographic change, communal politics and ‘jobless growth’, based on her long-term research in a Muslim village in Uttar Pradesh, India.

Kaveri Qureshi’s research is threaded by concern with intersectional inequalities and how gender, race/ethnicity, class, caste and religion shape experiences of health and intimate/personal life. Her publications include Marital Breakdown among British Asians (2016) and Chronic Illness in a Pakistani Labour Diaspora (2019). She works in the UK and Punjab.

 

This is a welcome contribution to scholarship on Muslim women, highlighting the diversity of Muslim women’s experiences across multiple contexts. Rather than approaching Muslim women as victims, this collection foregrounds the resourcefulness of Muslim women in the face of growing Islamophobia worldwide. Each carefully researched chapter in this volume provides a window into the complex negotiations undertaken by Muslim women as they struggle to make their claims vis-à-vis the state, the family, and the economy. This is a rich resource for scholars and students interested in the intersections of religion, gender, politics, economics and the law.

 

Nida Kirmani, Associate Professor of Sociology, Lahore University of Management Sciences, Lahore, Pakistan

 

 

 

Highlighting the diversity of lived experiences of Muslim women in South Asia and beyond, this collection of uniformly excellent essays expands our understandings of gender, religion and social location. These explorations have relevance for anyone interested in the intersection of gender with family, state, labour market and in the streets.

Nazia Hussein, Senior Lecturer in Race, University of Bristol, UK