<> "The repository administrator has not yet configured an RDF license."^^ . <> . . . "Conceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender\r\nIssues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in\r\nIndonesia"^^ . "Being a selhdentified feminist activist in Southeast Asia (and\r\nindeed most of the world) is to invite controversies related to various\r\nunderstandings of the term 'feminist' that carry positive or negative\r\nsocial connotations. This is increasingly salient in the Muslim world\r\nwhere conceptions of feminist identity, gender issues and activism\r\nare set against different textual interpretations of Islam. For\r\nexample, there are controversial differences between literal Islam and liberal Islam. Therefore this chapter examines the\r\ncontestations surrounding feminist identity and the\r\nconceptualization of gender issues by Muslim intellectual elites in\r\nIndonesia. This provides a conceptual framework for an empirical\r\ninvestigation of feminist identities among Muslim academics, which\r\nincludes lecturers and researchers in the Center for Women's\r\nStudies (Pusat Studi Wanita, hereafter PSW) and the Center for\r\nGender Studies (Pusat Studi Gender, hereafter PSG). Both PSW and\r\nPSG are university centers of learning, and this study focuses on six\r\nsuch centers in Y ogyakarta. 2\r\nThe lively debate between Muslim intellectual elites and\r\nactivists in Indonesia concerning feminist identities and gender\r\nissues are grounded in four key factors. First, from a broad historical\r\nperspective, the social structure in traditional Indonesian society\r\nprovided women the opportunity to achieve high status and\r\nrelatively elevated positions (Goody 1976; Atkinson and Errington\r\n1990). The second (related) factor is a long history of feminist\r\nawareness in Indonesia, even if feminism as a modem discipline and\r\nmovement originated from Western scholarship and literature, and\r\nhas only recently been embraced by Indonesian academic\r\ndepartments and institutes. Third, no matter what continent or\r\ncountry one visits, self-identified feminists and gender activists are a\r\nsource of controversy. Finally, Indonesian intellectuals are\r\nembroiled in a dynamic debate about the prospects for a legitimate\r\nform of 'Islamic feminism' to take hold in centers of higher learning.\r\nIn other words, the search for compatibility between religious"^^ . "2016-07-18" . . "3" . . "Faculty of Social and Political Sciences Diponegoro University and Yale Indonesia Forum International Conferent:e Book Series"^^ . . . "Conceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender Issues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in Indonesia"^^ . . . . . . . . "Alimatul"^^ . "Qibtiyah"^^ . "Alimatul Qibtiyah"^^ . . . . . . "Conceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender\r\nIssues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in\r\nIndonesia (Text)"^^ . . . . . "SOCIALJUSTICE.pdf"^^ . . . "Conceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender\r\nIssues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in\r\nIndonesia (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "lightbox.jpg"^^ . . . "Conceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender\r\nIssues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in\r\nIndonesia (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "preview.jpg"^^ . . . "Conceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender\r\nIssues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in\r\nIndonesia (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "medium.jpg"^^ . . . "Conceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender\r\nIssues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in\r\nIndonesia (Other)"^^ . . . . . . "small.jpg"^^ . . "HTML Summary of #20927 \n\nConceptualizing Feminist Identity and Gender \nIssues among Muslim Intellectual Elites in \nIndonesia\n\n" . "text/html" . . . "Artikel Dosen"@en . .