Muslim Girl Studies

A colloquium on “girl studies,” organized by Marcia Hermansen (director, IslamicWorld Studies) and Laura Miller (professor, Department of Anthropology) took place on 12 April 2008, at Loyola University Chicago. Presently, the study of adolescent females – increasingly referred to as girl studies –...

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Autores principales: Mahruq F. Khan, Marcia Hermansen
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2008
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/3321bdc254244147a17ae1775f7eaf8d
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:3321bdc254244147a17ae1775f7eaf8d2021-12-02T19:23:16ZMuslim Girl Studies10.35632/ajis.v25i4.14482690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/3321bdc254244147a17ae1775f7eaf8d2008-10-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/1448https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 A colloquium on “girl studies,” organized by Marcia Hermansen (director, IslamicWorld Studies) and Laura Miller (professor, Department of Anthropology) took place on 12 April 2008, at Loyola University Chicago. Presently, the study of adolescent females – increasingly referred to as girl studies – as a separate realm of focus is a contested idea in academe. Supporters claim that girl studies is a worthwhile research domain due to the prior disregard for age within women’s studies and gender within youth studies. Detractors note that the category and boundaries of what is considered a “girl” are unstable and historically and culturally varied. More specifically, such scholars as Sharon R. Mazzarella, Norma Odom Pecora, and Catherine Driscoll have argued that over time, literature, popular reading, and consumerism have become the means through which the mainstream culture instructs girls on how to become women. In turn, many girls negotiate their interests, sexual expression, body image, and rites of passage in culturally approved ways. Other girls, however, engage in personal, subjective interpretation by rejecting hegemonic standards of femininity in a post-industrial western world and often in the context of violence, displacement, and resistance. Loyola’s conference highlighted the impact of mainstream norms and ethnocentrism in girl studies by including scholarship from a range of American and non-American cultural contexts. We investigated how girls’ lives are constructed in an era of massive change as communities around the world experience processes of both globalization and localization ... Mahruq F. KhanMarcia HermansenInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 25, Iss 4 (2008)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Islam
BP1-253
spellingShingle Islam
BP1-253
Mahruq F. Khan
Marcia Hermansen
Muslim Girl Studies
description A colloquium on “girl studies,” organized by Marcia Hermansen (director, IslamicWorld Studies) and Laura Miller (professor, Department of Anthropology) took place on 12 April 2008, at Loyola University Chicago. Presently, the study of adolescent females – increasingly referred to as girl studies – as a separate realm of focus is a contested idea in academe. Supporters claim that girl studies is a worthwhile research domain due to the prior disregard for age within women’s studies and gender within youth studies. Detractors note that the category and boundaries of what is considered a “girl” are unstable and historically and culturally varied. More specifically, such scholars as Sharon R. Mazzarella, Norma Odom Pecora, and Catherine Driscoll have argued that over time, literature, popular reading, and consumerism have become the means through which the mainstream culture instructs girls on how to become women. In turn, many girls negotiate their interests, sexual expression, body image, and rites of passage in culturally approved ways. Other girls, however, engage in personal, subjective interpretation by rejecting hegemonic standards of femininity in a post-industrial western world and often in the context of violence, displacement, and resistance. Loyola’s conference highlighted the impact of mainstream norms and ethnocentrism in girl studies by including scholarship from a range of American and non-American cultural contexts. We investigated how girls’ lives are constructed in an era of massive change as communities around the world experience processes of both globalization and localization ...
format article
author Mahruq F. Khan
Marcia Hermansen
author_facet Mahruq F. Khan
Marcia Hermansen
author_sort Mahruq F. Khan
title Muslim Girl Studies
title_short Muslim Girl Studies
title_full Muslim Girl Studies
title_fullStr Muslim Girl Studies
title_full_unstemmed Muslim Girl Studies
title_sort muslim girl studies
publisher International Institute of Islamic Thought
publishDate 2008
url https://doaj.org/article/3321bdc254244147a17ae1775f7eaf8d
work_keys_str_mv AT mahruqfkhan muslimgirlstudies
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