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Islamism and masculinity: case study Pakistan
Islamismus und Männlichkeit: Fallstudie zu Pakistan
[Zeitschriftenartikel]
Abstract In Muslim societies, men use Islamism and its variants as means of self-actualization and directly in service of matters associated with personhood, masculinity, and particularly honor. This expressive trajectory i.e. exercising masculinity via Islamism holds true in Pakistan and can be broadly attr... mehr
In Muslim societies, men use Islamism and its variants as means of self-actualization and directly in service of matters associated with personhood, masculinity, and particularly honor. This expressive trajectory i.e. exercising masculinity via Islamism holds true in Pakistan and can be broadly attributed to three elements. First, Pakistan’s postcolonial baggage – a well-documented history of rise of Muslim nationalism, and Islamism in the subcontinent; second, western domination and interference in Pakistan’s socio-economic and political domains (as in competition with Islamic heritage and governance frameworks) affecting some segments (and not all) among Muslim youth; and third, decades of authoritarian rule taking turns with weak democratic governments who have largely disappointed in terms of alleviating absolute to relative poverty, marginalization and alienation troubling Pakistani society. Pakistan’s history and contemporary settings both reveal a dissonance between the prescribed, normative and idealized Muslim masculinity imperatives – and the socio-economic and political location of Pakistani men in the real world. Mostly leading dangerous, disenfranchised, and economically deprived lives it is difficult for them to uphold, for example, Quran’s masculine imperative of being a qawwam or an ethnic normative of honor. Islamism becomes one such avenue that increases the possibility of self-assertion and actualization of masculinity imperatives and as they appear in religious and cultural texts, narratives and anecdotes – for instance the theme of martyrdom. The resulting death will not only be divine, but also heroic. In the presence of precedence i.e. in form of documented history highlighting jihadism – this becomes plausible and ultimately adds to individual and collective rationality among Muslims. To develop these ideas further, this article draws upon empirical data sets and historical archival records.... weniger
Thesaurusschlagwörter
Selbstverwirklichung; Koran; sozioökonomische Faktoren; Geschlechtsrolle; Religiosität; Südasien; politische Identität; Mann; kulturelle Identität; Islamismus; Männlichkeit; islamische Gesellschaft; Pakistan; Terrorismus
Klassifikation
Sozialgeschichte, historische Sozialforschung
Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
Religionssoziologie
Freie Schlagwörter
militant/ jihadist Islamism
Sprache Dokument
Englisch
Publikationsjahr
2014
Seitenangabe
S. 135-149
Zeitschriftentitel
Historical Social Research, 39 (2014) 3
Heftthema
Terrorism, gender, and history
DOI
https://doi.org/10.12759/hsr.39.2014.3.135-149
ISSN
0172-6404
Status
Veröffentlichungsversion; begutachtet (peer reviewed)