Sexual Ethics and Islam: Feminist Reflections on Qur'an, Hadith, and JurisprudenceOneworld, 2006 - 217 pages Annotation Stoning. Slavery. Honour killings. Homosexuality. In the context of Islam, these topics are frequently discussed but little understood. When debated, such emotive issues often spark heated argument rather than reasoned deliberation. In this lucid and carefully constructed volume, feminist academic Kecia Ali examines classical Muslim texts and tries to evaluate whether a just system of sexual ethics is possible within an Islamic framework. Seeking to avoid polemical argument, Ali explores key themes such as consent and control, which are crucial to any understanding of either traditional Islamic sexual ethics or the possibilities for progressive transformation in these ideals. Suitable for students and the interested reader alike, Sexual Ethics in Islam is an essential tool for understanding modern Islam in today's increasingly sexualised world. |
From inside the book
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Page 81
... male / male sex . There is no consensus as to whether the Qur'an even mentions female same - sex activity . It might or might not be the subject of Surah 4 , verse 15 , which orders that , with the incrim- inating testimony of four ...
... male / male sex . There is no consensus as to whether the Qur'an even mentions female same - sex activity . It might or might not be the subject of Surah 4 , verse 15 , which orders that , with the incrim- inating testimony of four ...
Page 84
... male / male sexual activity do not take into account the possibility of a partnership where both men consider themselves " gay , " 36 but rather presuppose an age- and status - stratified asymmetrical relationship between unequal ...
... male / male sexual activity do not take into account the possibility of a partnership where both men consider themselves " gay , " 36 but rather presuppose an age- and status - stratified asymmetrical relationship between unequal ...
Page 127
... male audience , it is not the males who are being tasked with obligations and granted agency . The women of whom God speaks are passive in the sense of being divorced or widowed ( though one may presume a man leaving a widow did not do ...
... male audience , it is not the males who are being tasked with obligations and granted agency . The women of whom God speaks are passive in the sense of being divorced or widowed ( though one may presume a man leaving a widow did not do ...
Other editions - View all
Sexual Ethics and Islam: Feminist Reflections on Qur'an, Hadith, and ... Kecia Ali Limited preview - 2016 |
Sexual Ethics and Islam: Feminist Reflections on Qur'an, Hadith, and ... Kecia Ali No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
Abdullah Yusuf Ali acceptance acts Ahmed Aishah Aishah's age al-Dhahabi Al-Ghazali al-Nikah American Muslim Arabic argue authority Barlas Bukhari chapter claims classical clitoris concubinage concubine consent consummation contemporary Muslim context desire discourses discussion divine divorce dower exegetes Family fatwa female circumcision female genital cutting female slaves feminist forbidden Gender Justice hadith Hanafi History homosexuality human husband illicit sex intercourse interpretations Islamic Law issue jurisprudence jurists Keller Khan Kugle last accessed licit liwat male and female marital married matters medieval men's modern moral Muslim thinkers Muslim women non-Muslim normative nushuz partners permissible practice premodern prepuce prohibition Prophet Muhammad punishment question Qur'an refers relationship religion religious Sahih Sahih Muslim same-sex marriage same-sex sexual scholars sexual activity sexual ethics slave concubinage slavery social societies specific spouses suggest sunnah Surah talaq term tion tradition trans translation University Press Western wife wife's wives woman zina