L'ombre et son double : : femmes islamistes, libanaises et modernes / / Dalal el-Bizri.

The study by Dalal el-Bizri, researcher and associate professor at the Lebanese University, is part of a CERMOC research program devoted to public life and its expressions in Middle Eastern societies (see Cahiers du CERMOC n ° 5, 7, 8, 9, 12).Often treated (more often mistreated by current represent...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Cahiers du CERMOC ; Number 13
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Place / Publishing House:Beirut, Lebanon : : Presses de l'Ifpo,, 1995.
Year of Publication:1995
Language:French
Series:Cahiers du CERMOC ; Number 13.
Physical Description:1 online resource (114 pages) :; digital, PDF file(s).
Notes:Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
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Summary:The study by Dalal el-Bizri, researcher and associate professor at the Lebanese University, is part of a CERMOC research program devoted to public life and its expressions in Middle Eastern societies (see Cahiers du CERMOC n ° 5, 7, 8, 9, 12).Often treated (more often mistreated by current representations), the situation of Muslim women in Arab societies is discussed here with regard to Lebanon, on which no field study was available, particularly since the development of Islamist mobilizations in Lebanese society. The raw material for this exploratory study is provided by interviews Dalal el-Bizri conducted with ten Shiite women active in Hezbollah, in the southern suburbs of Beirut. The author restores us a testimony of the body to body and the debate which mingled her with her subject (s) during several months of investigation. She thus reminds the reader to what extent research is also a questioning of oneself, in the person of the researcher as well as in the paradigms which help him to construct his object. On this dialectic of subject and object, generally inscribed in the “horstext” of research but which here forms part of his very writing, another is superimposed. The itinerary of the women questioned about their release into the public sphere in Lebanon testifies to their modernity. Islam, which constructs their representation of themselves and inscribes them in history, appeals to tradition. Would the modernity claimed by Islamism be different from that which it condemns in the name of tradition? We know that the quarrel is not just a play on words. Its political dimension will shape the Lebanon of tomorrow and everyone, along with the author, must seek the outcome ... without concession.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages [111]-112).
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Dalal el-Bizri.