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Asma Barlas is an academic educated in Pakistan and the United States. She is the Director of the Center for the Study of Culture, Race, and Ethnicity of the department of politics at Ithaca College, New York. Her specialties include comparative and international politics, Islam and Qur'anic hermeneutics, and women and gender. [1] Barlas was named to the prestigious Spinoza Chair at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands for "her prominent contributions to discussions about women and Islam". [2] Her views and interpretations of Islam have been called "Islamic feminism," but she herself rejects this term, unless it is defined as "a discourse of gender equality and social justice that derives its understanding and mandate from the Qur’an and seeks the practice of rights and justice for all human beings in the totality of their existence across the public-private continuum."
[edit] BiographyBorn in Pakistan in 1950, Barlas was one of the first women to be inducted into the foreign service. Her diplomatic career was ended, when General Zia ul Haq dismissed her from the Foreign Service on two charges; for calling him a "buffoon" in her personal diary (leaked by her former in-laws) and for having said at a private dinner at the home of Pakistan's ambassador to the Philippines, "that the judiciary in Pakistan was neither free and nor fair", She joined the paper, The Muslim, as assistant editor, but eventually had to leave Pakistan for reasons of personal safety in 1983 and later received political asylum in the U.S. [3] Barlas is former chair of the Department of Politics and founding director of the Center for the Study of Culture, Race, and Ethnicity at Ithaca College. She has a B.A. in English Literature and Philosophy, an M.A in Journalism from Pakistan, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from the Graduate School of International Studies at the University of Denver in Colorado. [edit] ResearchIn her recent work, she has focused on the way Muslims produce religious knowledge, especially patriarchal exegesis of the Qur'an, a topic she has explored in her book, "Believing Women" in Islam: Unreading Patriarchal Interpretations of the Qur'an. She has also written numerous editorials for The Daily Times, Pakistan. [edit] Books
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