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Blindness to Gender and Patriarchy
In: Gender Equality in Law : Uncovering the Legacies of Czech State Socialism
When the Patriarchy Gets Worried
In: Feminist Sociology Feminist sociology, S. 1-12
Patriarchy and the World of Gossips
In: When Gossips Meet, S. 26-68
Chapter Four: Patriarchy in Crisis
In: Immigration and Contemporary British Theater
Radical Feminism and the Concept of Patriarchy
In: Feminist Political Theory, S. 155-166
The Global/Local Nexus of Patriarchy
In: Global Faulkner, S. 116-131
The Pahlavi Dynasty as a Centralizing Patriarchy
In: Women and Politics in Iran, S. 61-98
Confronting Double Patriarchy: Islamist Women in Turkey
Examines women's agency in Turkish Islamic revivalism, focusing on the 1980s new veiling movement. The Islamist women's movement is situated along the continuum of Turkish women's activism before scrutinizing how Islamist women's identity is defined in terms of the Kemalist idea of the new Turkish woman & the Islamist construct of the traditional woman. It is argued that Islamist women's veiling in the public sphere confronts the legitimacy of the secular republic & stands in contention with secular women's groups. In addition, some Islamic women are redefining their identity with reference to Islamic sources to challenge the elite patriarchy. Together, these actions, termed "double patriarchy," curtail the possibility of Islamist women's political equality. Thus, demonstrated is how the identity claims of Islamist women are inhibited by the patriarchal Islamist elite & secular, Kemalist women. J. Zendejas
Challenging Patriarchy: Pakistan, Egypt, and Turkey
In: Women Waging War and Peace : International Perspectives of Women’s Roles in Conflict and Post-Conflict Reconstruction
Gender And The Body Politic: The Politics Of Patriarchy
In: The Politics of Fear: What Right-Wing Populist Discourses Mean, S. 151-176
Confronting Double Patriarchy: Islamist Women in Turkey
Examines women's agency in Turkish Islamic revivalism, focusing on the 1980s new veiling movement. The Islamist women's movement is situated along the continuum of Turkish women's activism before scrutinizing how Islamist women's identity is defined in terms of the Kemalist idea of the new Turkish woman & the Islamist construct of the traditional woman. It is argued that Islamist women's veiling in the public sphere confronts the legitimacy of the secular republic & stands in contention with secular women's groups. In addition, some Islamic women are redefining their identity with reference to Islamic sources to challenge the elite patriarchy. Together, these actions, termed "double patriarchy," curtail the possibility of Islamist women's political equality. Thus, demonstrated is how the identity claims of Islamist women are inhibited by the patriarchal Islamist elite & secular, Kemalist women. J. Zendejas
Modern radical feminism: the theory of patriarchy
In: Feminist Political Theory, S. 181-193
War in Cyprus: Patriarchy and the Penelope Myth
In: Caught up in Conflict, S. 25-44