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Poetry. Dramatic and intimate, the poems in DOES SHE HAVE A NAME?
trace the journeys of two women--one middle aged, the other her
infant granddaughter--through near-mortal encounters with medical
crises. Both survive their trials, passing from life to death and
back again; both face wrenching, unpredictable challenges; both
emerge from years of therapy, made whole but alone, changed by
experience in apparent and invisible ways. Moving from a neonatal
intensive care unit's urgent ministrations to the patient work of
neurologists and speech pathologists, told from the perspectives of
parent, child, husband, and witness, and exploring questions of
disability, difference, and the calculated value of human life,
DOES SHE HAVE A NAME? is an affecting, provocative book of poems.
"I have to be honest with you. Islam is on very thin ice with
me.... Through our screaming self-pity and our conspicuous
silences, we Muslims are conspiring against ourselves. We're in
crisis and we're dragging the rest of the world with us. If ever
there was a moment for an Islamic reformation, it's now. For the
love of God, what are we doing about it?"
In this open letter, Irshad Manji unearths the troubling
cornerstones of mainstream Islam today: tribal insularity,
deep-seated anti-Semitism, and an uncritical acceptance of the
Koran as the final, and therefore superior, manifesto of God's
will. But her message is ultimately positive. She offers a
practical vision of how Islam can undergo a reformation that
empowers women, promotes respect for religious minorities, and
fosters a competition of ideas. Her vision revives "ijtihad,"
Islam's lost tradition of independent thinking. In that spirit,
Irshad has a refreshing challenge for both Muslims and non-Muslims:
Don't silence yourselves. Ask questions---out loud. "The Trouble
with Islam Today" is a clarion call for a fatwa-free future.
Die Studie beschaftigt sich mit der "Erfindung des Kosmos" anhand
der popularwissenschaftlichen Publizistik und sowjetischen Science
Fiction der Tauwetterzeit. Sie zeigt, wie infolge des ersten
Sputnikflugs in popularwissenschaftlichen Zeitschriften sich ein
Diskurs entfaltete, der nicht nur Kosmonauten, Weltraumreisen oder
die Frage nach intelligentem Leben im All umfasste, sondern auch
Kybernetik, Telepathie und "ungeloeste Menschheitsratsel" auf der
Erde (wie Atlantis oder den Schneemenschen). Die Wissenschaftliche
Fantastik (Science Fiction) jener Jahre entwickelte zeitgleich an
den Kosmos gebundene Imaginationen zu "Faszinationsgeschichten"
weiter, die sie zu einer der popularsten Literaturgattungen der
Sowjetunion machten.
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