Description |
1 online resource (18 pages, 1) |
Summary |
The author begins by contrasting representations of the Muslim peasant in the North African countryside with representations of Muslim women; the former almost always appears impoverished and disheartened while Muslim women are often typified as happy, relaxed, and surrounded by the luxuries of the harem. Wishing to establish a more accurate depiction of middle-class Muslim women's lives in Algeria and Tunisia, the author argues that their existences were filled with sadness, misery, and oppression. Citing legal examples from the Koran, the author reveals that polygamy, the repudiation of wives, women's lack of consent in marriage, prescriptions on domestic abuse, and statutes against women's education have reinforced women's inferior social status. Compared to French women, Muslim North African women suffer under much greater oppression, in the author's view |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Muslim women.
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Muslim women -- Africa, North
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Women's rights.
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Marital status.
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Marital status
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Muslim women
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Women's rights
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North Africa
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Form |
Electronic book
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