This book offers a new methodological and theoretical approach
to the highly sensitive and complicated issue of violence against
women in contemporary Iran. Challenging the widespread notion that
secularisation and modernisation are the keys to emancipating
women, the author instead posits that domestic violence is deeply
rooted in society and situated in the fundament of current
discourses.
Investigating how orthodox jurisprudence as mainstream
discourse, together with social, legal and public norms, help to
perpetuate the production and reproduction of physical,
psychological, sexual and economical violence against women, the
author presents and reflects upon narratives, experiences and the
social realities accounting for domestic violence against women.
Drawing on qualitative empirical research, she theorises that the
notion of secularization and modernisation helping to overcome such
violence is to some extent represented by Islamic feminism, secular
feminism, and religious intellectualism, all of which are
methodologically examined in the analysis.
Challenging conventional wisdom regarding women 's place in Iran
and in wider Islamic society, this book offers a new insight into
violence against Muslim women and as such will be an important
addition to the existing literature in the areas of gender studies,
Middle Eastern and Islamic studies, and Iranian studies.
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