Political Activism
1. Inquiries on the Periphery: Contemporary Forms of Muslim Women’s Activism within a Post-Modern Context
Natasha Latiff and Helena Zeweri (Femin Ijtihad, New York)
2. Neoliberalism in an Increasing Digital Political Age: The Case of Jordan and Queen Rania
Sarah K. Meyrick (New York University)
3. Women’s Cyber Activism in Iran
Samaneh Oladi (University of California Santa Barbara)
4. Gender Activism in Islamist Movements in Morocco
Merieme Yafout (University of Hassan II, Casablanca)
Art
5. “I Have a Voice”: Despatialization, Multiple Alterities, and the Digital Performance of Jabala Women of Northern Morocco
Maria Curtis (University of Houston-Clear Lake)
6. A Cyber Ummah: Muslim Women’s Arts Associations Online
Valérie Behiery (University of Montreal)
7. Muslim Women’s Online Photographic and Video Self-Representations as a Counter-Discourse
Anna Piela (University of Westminster, London)
Education
8. Muslim women leveraging Private university Online/Offline space for a Public cause: A Saudi Arabia Case Study
Payal Arora (Erasmus University, Rotterdam) and Leigh Llewelyn Graham (Columbia University, New York)
9. (TBC) E-Learning and educational opportunities for Muslim women: A review of the e-learning landscape in higher education in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Denise Wood (University of South Australia, Adelaide) and Shatha Makki (The National Centre for E-Learning and Distance Learning, Riyadh)
10. Muslim Women in Hyderabad and Digital Storytelling
Ioana Literat (University of Southern California, Los Angeles)
11. Interpreting Religion, Enacting Parenthood, Taming Technology – Indonesian Muslim mothers’ supervision of children’s internet use
Rahayu and Sun Sun Lim (National University of Singapore)
12. Al-Huda International: (how) Muslim Women Empower Themselves through Study of the Qur’an
Usha Sanyal (Queens University of Charlotte)
Digital and Religious Identities
13. Exploring media, politics, place and identity for young Muslim women in Bristol
Imogen Wallace (Queen Mary, University of London)
14. Identities and personae performed in Muslim women's blogs
Shabana Mir (Oklahoma State University)
15. Of CyberMuslimahs: Wives of the Prophet and Muslim Women in the Digital Age
Ruqayya Yasmine Khan (Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas)
16. Nationalist, Muslim and Islamist women bloggers in Egypt
Fatma Emam (Nazra for Feminist Studies, Cairo)
Converts
17. Female converts from Greek Orthodoxy to Islam and their digital religious identity
Alexandros Sakellariou (Panteion University, Athens)
18. Getting beyond ethnic and religious homogeneity: being a female Muslim convert in Poland
Katarzyna Górak-Sosnowska (University of Warsaw)
19. The role of the Internet in dress choices among native-born converts to Islam in North America
Heather Akou (Indiana University Bloomington)
20. Brazilian Muslim women as bloggers: Islamic knowledge, religious activism, and gender dynamics in digital contexts
Gisele Fonseca Chagas (The Fluminense Federal University, Rio de Janeiro)
Resistance and negotiation
21. Let’s Talk about Sex: Australian Online Discussions of Muslim Female Sexuality
Roxanne Marcotte (The University of Queensland)
22. Sexuality, Difference and American Hijabi Bloggers
Rebecca Robinson (Arizona State University)
23. Muslim Women’s Online Narratives
Danielle Saad (Texas Tech University, Lubbock)
24. Muslim Women: Active Online Preachers- Interreligious Dialoguers
Maha Youssuf (Independent Writer and Blogger, Egypt)
No comments:
Post a Comment