Performative Contradictions of Women's Rights and Religious Freedoms: Dissonance across Space and Time Cover Image

Performative Contradictions of Women's Rights and Religious Freedoms: Dissonance across Space and Time
Performative Contradictions of Women's Rights and Religious Freedoms: Dissonance across Space and Time

Author(s): A. Ebru Akcasu
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Political Philosophy, Politics and society, History and theory of political science, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Social Theory, Sociology of Politics
Published by: Ústav mezinárodních vztahů
Keywords: gender; religious freedom; women’s rights; non-dyadic marriages; moral entrepreneurs; intersectionality

Summary/Abstract: This piece deliberates on Rola El-Husseini’s contribution to contemporary debates on double standards and dissonance at the intersection of women’s rights and religious freedom in the Global North by highlighting similar performative contradictions of the past. In exercising thinking through current dilemmas with Mark Twain’s commentary on non-dyadic marriages in the Ottoman Empire and the United States, this reaction suggests that across time and space, whoever the manufactured “other” may be, the processes and mechanisms of inclusion and exclusion generally favor the interests of those who hold and seek to maintain the greatest martial, economic, and political power.

  • Issue Year: 59/2024
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 87-95
  • Page Count: 9
  • Language: English
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