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* results  search (All words (XALL)) ethnic
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Title: 
Persons: 
Language/s: 
English
Publication statement: 
Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, 2024
Extent: 
1 Online-Ressource (xvii, 210 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Note: 
Includes bibliographical references and index
Bibliogr. context: 
Erscheint auch als: ISBN 3031451856
ISBN: 
978-3-031-45186-7 electronic bk.
3-031-45186-4 electronic bk.
Weitere Ausgaben: 978-3-031-45185-0 (Druckausgabe)
Notes: 
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Historically Locating Muslim women: Australia and Coloniality of Power -- Chapter 3: Decolonial Feminism: Theorising Muslim Women's Subjectivity -- Chapter 4: Understanding of Islam and Being Muslim: Negotiating Diversity and Authenticity -- Chapter 5: "The Good Girl": Negotiating Gendered Identity at the Intersections of Islam and Ethnicity -- Chapter 6: The Oppressed and Palatable Others: Intersections of Islam, Ethnicity, Race and Gender -- Chapter 7: Muslim Women's Borderlands Identities.
Wrong ISBN: 
*3-03-145185-6
Subject heading: 
Further documents: 
Library of Congress Classification: HQ1170
Dewey Decimal Classification: 305.48/697
Book Industry Communication: JFSL1
bisacsh: SOC004000
Thema – the subject category scheme for a global book trade: JBSL1
Abstract: 
This book claims a discursive space in academic scholarship for knowledges and ways of knowing that capture the diversity, complexity and full humanness of Australian Muslim women's subjectivities. It draws on in-depth conversational interviews with 20 Australian Muslim women from various ethnic backgrounds during which the women shared their experiences of being at the crossroads of their religious, gendered, racialised and ethnic identities. The book puts forward a decolonial feminist border methodology by weaving the work of decolonial feminist philosophers Maria Lugones and Gloria Anzaldúa with postmodern feminist thinking on subjectivity and with discourse analysis. This methodology is used to centre and attend to the fluidity and plurality of Muslim women's subjectivities, at the intersections of race, ethnicity, patriarchy, gender, sexuality and Islam. Lütfiye Ali (PhD, BA (Hons.) VicMelb) is a Cypriot Turkish Muslim Australian scholar in the field of Community Psychology. Lutfiye's research areas include intercultural relations, racialized and gendered dynamics of oppression and resistance, identity, community making and belonging among migrant, second generation Australians and Australian Muslim women
 
Link to digital copy: 
 
 
 
 
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