Artikel

Unhyphenated Jewish religious feminism : feminist studies in the time of neoliberalism or neoliberal feminist studies?

Verfasst von: Yanay-Ventura, Galit [weitere]
in: Women's studies international forum
New York: 2015 , 18-25 S.

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Einrichtung: Ariadne | Wien
Verfasst von: Yanay-Ventura, Galit; Yanay, Niza
In: Women's studies international forum
Jahr: 2015
Sprache: Englisch
Beschreibung:
After 9/11 and with the re-awakening of a feminist criticism of religion, particularly of Muslim women who insist on wearing the veil as an act of piety, Mahmood (2005) offered a new way to conceive the pious female subject “in a context where submission to certain forms of (external) authority is a condition for achieving the subject's potentiality.” Following her, but in contrast to her Focaultian analysis of subjectivization, we use Deleuze and Guattari's work in A Thousand Plateaus to propose a reading which views thoughts and actions as events of double articulation; neither unidirectional nor bidirectional but a product of lines of flight and a rupture of the hegemonic power through movement toward the margins. In order to do so, this case study discusses how Orthodox Jewish women are creating unhyphenated religious feminism without falling into the binaries of religion and feminism that assume conflicting rationalities. We interviewed 44 women who openly declared themselves feminists and religiously orthodox, all of them members of the feminist religious organization Kolech (“your voice” in English). Feminist scholars who previously engaged with Deleuze and Guattari's theory wrestled with concepts of identity and difference. By contrast, we attempt to show how the concept of flights to the margins in daily decisions and actions articulates a religious feminist female subjectivity as multiplicity in spaces where the authority of both is redefined. The women we interviewed positioned themselves on the seams of religion and feminism by experimenting with temporary actions that changed according to the conditions and possibilities of their lives. The women of Kolech teach us that a feminist critique of religion, and more generally of liberal democracy, is possible from the margins where subjects can exercise their desires and ideas more freely.
Anmerkung:
References: Seiten 24-25
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