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Toward an Abbasid History of Emotions: The Case of Slavery

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Julia Bray*
Affiliation:
Oriental Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK; e-mail: julia.bray@orinst.ox.ac.uk
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Extract

The idea that there can be histories of everything or anything has not yet taken root in the field of Islamic history, which is still dominated by political history. There has been a revival of women's history, and gender studies is flourishing, but these developments have brought about only one radical rethinking of mainstream narratives: Nadia Maria El Cheikh's Women, Islam, and Abbasid Identity, which argues that Abbasid society's construction of early Islam and of its own self-image is profoundly gendered, because “Women, gender relations, and sexuality are at the heart of the cultural construction of identity, as they are discursively used to fix moral boundaries and consolidate particularities and differences.”

Information

Type
Roundtable
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017