Academic literature on the topic 'Féminismes religieux'
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Journal articles on the topic "Féminismes religieux"
de Gasquet, Béatrice. "Quels espaces pour les féminismes religieux ?" Nouvelles Questions Féministes 38, no. 1 (2019): 18. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/nqf.381.0018.
Full textNgom, Saliou. "L’émergence et le développement d’un mouvement féministe décolonial au Sénégal : entre approche postcoloniale et revendications égalitaires." Articles 34, no. 2 (September 13, 2022): 51–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1092230ar.
Full textKarkbi, Badr. "La déconstruction féministe du traditionalisme religieux." Religiologiques, no. 45 (2023): 65–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1113242ar.
Full textDumont-Johnson, Micheline. "Les communautés religieuses et la condition féminine." Articles 19, no. 1 (April 12, 2005): 79–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/055774ar.
Full textRochefort, Florence. "Chapitre II. Féminisme, laïcité et engagements religieux." Débats Jeunesses 17, no. 1 (2006): 35–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/debaj.2006.936.
Full textDental, Monique, and Marie-Josée Salmon. "Luttes féministes contre le politico-religieux en France." Diplômées 272, no. 1 (2020): 51–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/femdi.2020.10231.
Full textBertrand, Chantal, and Stéphanie Tremblay. "Des discours féministes en tension : le cas du programme Éthique et culture religieuse." Articles hors thème 34, no. 2 (September 13, 2022): 165–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1092236ar.
Full textFussinger, Catherine, Irene Becci, Amel Mahfoudh, and Helene Fueger. "Oser penser un engagement féministe et religieux." Nouvelles Questions Féministes 38, no. 1 (2019): 8. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/nqf.381.0008.
Full textDion, Michel. "La théologie/philosophie féministe de Mary Daly et le socialisme religieux de Paul Tillich." Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses 25, no. 4 (December 1996): 379–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000842989602500401.
Full textGautier, Arlette. "Les politiques de planification familiale dans les pays en développement : du malthusianisme au féminisme ?" Lien social et Politiques, no. 47 (September 12, 2002): 67–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/000343ar.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Féminismes religieux"
Dubrulle, Benjamin. "Sociabilités inclusives musulmanes : accueillir les minorités sexuelles et de genre musulmanes, en France et au Royaume-Uni." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris, EHESS, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024EHES0154.
Full textOver the last twenty years, several Muslim organisations, collectives and places of worship have emerged in Europe, explicitly welcoming gender and sexual minorities. These groups have progressively adapted and specialised their activities: Muslim LGBT+ organisations offer activities specifically for this audience, while inclusive mosques seek to welcome all worshipers, including but not limited to gender and sexual minorities. However, these groups have not evolved in a similar way between France and the United Kingdom. British organisations have multiplied and developed activities, both religious and secular. Meanwhile, any direct reference to Islam within French LGBT+ organisations has completely disappeared during the 2010s. This thesis explores the evolution of Muslim inclusive sociability over time, the various social and political positions of these groups, while questioning this marked difference between France and the UK. Its main hypothesis is that different understandings of citizenship, and of what it means to belong and participate in the citizenry, may partly explain this asymmetrical development of the charity sector dedicated to LGBT+ Muslims. Ethnographic research conducted in both countries between 2018 and 2022 has confirmed but also nuanced this hypothesis. This research consists of individual interviews with various members of these groups, periods of participant observation and analysis of archival material. It emphasises the importance of the volunteers’ life trajectories, as well as the role of internal debates surrounding how these groups define the political cause they defend and what the Muslim identity means to them. This study also shows how public institutions’ expectations, their views on religion in general and Islam in particular, plays a crucial role in whether or not Muslim groups are seen as beneficial to society and are able to secure the resources to do so. This thesis thus explores, through thick ethnographic descriptions, various initiatives carried by young Muslims, who generally experience an upward social mobility and are close to, when not completely part of, the intellectual upper classes. The decisions and compromises necessary to sustain charitable activities sometimes weaken the ideal of unconditional inclusivity. This study also shows that a secularisation process within religious organisations can be consciously chosen by believers rather than endured. In this respect, secularisation and religious neutrality need to be distinguished. In its analysis of Muslim inclusive sociability, this thesis pays particular attention to the relationship between religion and other spheres of social activity. In inclusive mosques, working on religious normativity fall in line with other professional and voluntary engagements: political activism, social entrepreneurship, scientific research. An understanding of religion that strongly values the individual autonomy of believers, against patriarchy and mandatory heterosexuality, comes with the will to preserve family relationships and form new solidarities to care for fellow Muslims
Ali, Zahra. "Women and Gender in Iraq : between Nation-Building and Fragmentation." Paris, EHESS, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015EHES0101.
Full textThis research explores gender issues and women's political activism in contemporary Iraq via a socio-historical study of women's social, economic and political experiences since the formation of the modern Iraqi state, as well as a detailed ethnographic account of the context, content, and political significance of post-invasion women's political activism. Throughout this thesis, I explore contemporary Iraqi women's political activism using a socio-historical and intersectional approach, which includes the study of the relationship between gender, nation, state and Islam. I argue that exploring Iraqi women's political activism requires looking at the way gender and women's issues have been socio-historically defined - according to conflicting notions of nationhood, the evolution of the postcolonial state and state-society relations - as well as different understandings and deployments of Islam. In adopting this complex socio-historical and intersectional framework of analysis, I ethnographically explore and problematize notions of women's rights, feminism, Islamist and secular women's rights activism. I propose that linking postcolonial feminism to intersectionality through a socio-historical and ethnographic approach allows one to go beyond simplistic dichotomies - such as culture/economy, feminism/religion, secular/Islamist women's rights activism and local/global. I suggest to ground gender, class, statehood, and geographic, ethnic, religious and sectarian belongings within their complex and multilayered contexts of deployment, while bearing in mind global structures of inequality such as colonialism and imperialism
Hamidi, Malika. "Féministes musulmanes dans le contexte postcolonial de l'Europe francophone : stratégies identitaires et mobilisations translocales." Paris, EHESS, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015EHES0024.
Full textPy, Fatima. "Le surnaturel dans le roman féminin guadeloupéen contemporain." Thesis, Antilles, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017ANTI0139/document.
Full textThis thesis studies the occurrences of supernatural in Guadeloupe’s feminine novel. The writers are all women from Guadeloupe: they were born there (Lacrosil, Conde) or their parents come from Guadeloupe and they grew up there (Schwarz-Bart, Pineau). Every novel evokes a literary period of the 20th century: demain jab-herma (1960-1970), Pluie et vent sur Telumée miracle (1970-1980), moi, tituba, sorciere… (1980-1990) and la Grande drive des esprits (1990-2000).Every novel is based on supernatural: demain, jab-herma's hero is a sorcerer, such as Schwarz-Bart and Conde’s heroes. La Grande drive des esprits describes a family through the 20th century in Guadeloupe and a few characters have supernatural powers. We first made an inventory of contemporary feminine novels: it rises at the 20th century, thanks to our writers and through this supernatural theme. Then, we studied supernatural, religious magical, sacred's role in Guadeloupe: where it comes from, its place in Caribbean, its popular role. Finally, we studied fantastic imaginary's place: how it allows unpowerful slaves and slaves' children to think themselves powerful, the novel shows the social role of magical religious.We wanted to show how supernatural partly defines Guadeloupe’s novel. In conclusion, this study reveals how supernatural makes part of the weltanshauung, the way the people from Guadeloupe can see the world; the characters' whole life is made of supernatural, from birth to death; supernatural shows women's fundamental role, and appears as well in speaking, customs and public life
Dumont, Catherine. "Femmes laïques responsables dans l'Eglise catholique en France." Paris, EPHE, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007EPHE5011.
Full textThis thesis is based on a survey into a sample of 52 women officials in national or diocesan services, in catholic movements, in universities of theology and in religious communities (major superiors). It tries to explain the contradiction between the minority participation of women in those responsibilities, associated to a precarious status, and the absence of a public and critical expression of women in French Catholic church. The observation of a very light knowledge of feminist theologies has directed the analysis towards the French catholic feminism characterised by its weakness. In reality, these women are much more influenced by feminine catholic movements as ACGF or “Guides de France” which educated them to fulfil public functions in civil society as well as in church and which contributed to equilibrate relationships between laymen and clergy. These women are also familiar to the new feminism proposed by John Paul II which exalts the feminine genius and value their specific role in the Church. They seem to be postfeminist in accordance with Alain Touraine ‘s analysis much more than victim of a symbolic domination (according to Pierre Bourdieu). The comparison with catholic women in other national catholic churches (Quebec, Belgium, Holland) who fulfil similar responsibilities confirm the importance, at the same time, of the national feminists movements, the solidarity between catholic and non catholic women, the solidarity between nuns and non consecrated women, the relations between State and Church, to explain the ability of women to elaborate a critical expression about their place in religious work. The comparison with French women ministers in Protestant churches and the first priests women in Anglican Church in England, underline the link between the opening of the function of priest up to women and the end of the tendency to regard the priest as sacred and demonstrate that women becoming priests don’t look after masculine power but try to make this job more feminine, which means to make it more human, more brotherly
May, Paul. "Droits individuels et redéfinition de la laïcité : le cas des tribunaux d'arbitrage religieux en Ontario." Paris, EHESS, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013EHES0147.
Full textIn this doctoral dissertation l explore the way identity politics redefine secularism. Philosophers in favour of the "politics of recognition" defend the idea that cultures must be preserved. They support institutional measures more respectful of cultural and religious differences. Secularism (defined as a strict separation of public and private spheres) has to be adapted to this new situation. The question of group rights can be thorny when it comes to religious groups. Ln this dissertation, I focus on the implications of this redefinition on individual rights : how can we articulate individual rights with the recognition of religious groups ? To answer this question, l develop an argument in two pans, one philosophical, and one sociological. In the first part, l proceed to an analysis of the writings of three philosophers: Bhikhu Parekh, Charles Taylor and Will Kymlicka. I will analyse which model of diversity is the more convenient to reconcile individual rights and group rights. Ln the second part of my dissertation, I proceed to a sociological case study : the debate about faith based tribunals in Ontario (2003-2005). I identify how secularism has been used by protagonists. My empirical sources are based on various documents : newspapers, government reports, NGO publications. There was a real ambiguity in the Ontarian religious tribunals in regards to individual rights, but the forcefulness of the debate is due to the emergence of Islam within the Canadian public sphere. Thus we see that the faith-based debate can be associated with European debates about Islam, like the controversy over minarets in Switzerland, the ban on the full veil in France and Belgium or the Muhammad cartoons in Denmark. Finally, in the light of my entire study, I establish that Charles Taylor allows a promising articulation between the recognition of religious groups and individual rights
Necula, Simona Mihaela. "Controverses autour du Deuxième sexe de Simone de Beauvoir." Paris, EHESS, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012EHES0072.
Full textThe publication of The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir (1949) generated a lot of reactions among intellectuals worldwide. Feminists, historians, sociologists, writers and philosophers have reacted since its publication, in debates more or less known, commenting on Beauvoir's thesis as well as on the reception of her book. Beauvoir’s most often cited thesis is: "One is not born a woman, one becomes one. " The objective of our research was to answer the following question: what do the controversies around The Second Sex tell us about the social, political and religious world that shelters them, what do they tell us about the representations of women, how do they change them? To answer this research question we made four case studies that correspond to four essential moments in the debates around the reception of The Second Sex: the first moment is the scandal of the publication of The Second Sex, in 1949; the second time is the year 1956 with the rise of movements of new feminist militants and the inclusion of Beauvoir’s book in the “Index Librorum Prohibitorum” of the Holy Office in Rome; the third moment is the year 1970 (the '68 of women) with the creation of the Women's Liberation Movement (MLF); the last choice is the year 1999 with the fiftieth anniversary of The Second Sex. At the end of each chapter we detailed the changes induced by the controversies analyzed on the representations of women and even of Beauvoir herself. The method used in the research is that of the sociological analysis of controversies integrated by historians of science studies in the field of intellectual history
Itoh, Ayako. "The emergence of the bhikkhunī-saṅgha in Thailand : Contexts, Strategies and Challenges." Paris, EPHE, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013EPHE5015.
Full textAn important number of Thai as well as Western scholars have debated over the legitimacy, or lack thereof, of the emergence of the defacto bhikkhunī-saṅgha in the Theravāda tradition, especially since the taking of Lower ordination, or pabbajjā, of Bhikkhunī Dhammanandā in 2001. At the same time, little attention has been paid to the lives, practice, motives and discourses of the growing number of women who are actually taking pabbajjā and upasampadā, Higher ordination, and the contexts in which their individual choices have been made and carried out during the past decade. The interdiction to ordain women for sāmaṇerī or bhikkhunī as proclaimed in 1928 by the Supreme Patriarch of the Thai saṅgha is still theoretically in effect today. Yet, the latest numbers show that there are currently 31 bhikkhunī and 37 sāmaṇerī throughout Thailand. Moreover, from 2008-2011 250 women took temporary sāmaṇerī-hood in Watr Songdhammakalyani, the monastery of Bhikkhunī Dhammanandā in Nakhon Pathom province, west of Bangkok, and 76 women in the Nirotharam Meditation Center in Chiang Mai City, where the author conducted most of her fieldwork. However unofficial, the acceptance of females taking both Lower and Higher ordination by a certain segment of society reflects the existing dissonance over the identity of contemporary Thai Theravāda tradition, and the expansion of such phenomenon, which concerns all stakeholders of Theravāda Buddhism. This study does not aim to argue whether the emerging bhikkhunī-saṅgha is legitimate or deviant from the traditional viewpoint of Thai Theravāda. It takes the existing phenomenon as an object of study and tries to understand who these Buddhist women are who are seemingly on a subversive path, what it means for them to become bhikkhunī, how the defacto bhikkhunī-saṅgha started to take root, and what the grounds are for its social acceptance. Unveiling life histories of these women, their everyday life, and their lay and monastic networks lead us to have a grasp that feminist discourses on gender equality can hardly explain the full context behind this phenomenon, but is rather the result of a more complex and historical dialogue between Thai society and Theravāda Buddhism in an ever-globalizing world
Djennane, Haouchene Karima. "Dynamiques d’empowerment des musulmanes dans l’espace public étatsunien depuis les années 1970 : généalogie et sociologie d’un militantisme féminin au sein de l’islam." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019SORUL171.
Full textIn American religious history, the feminization of Protestant denominations has been a long and gradual process. This feminization has been characterized by the increasing participation of women within religious institutions, not only as worshippers but also as religious leaders. Although Islam is considered to be a newly transplanted minority religion in the United-States, there are indicators revealing that, like many other transplanted religions in the United States, such as Reform Judaïsm and Buddhism, Muslim religious institutions are undergoing a process of feminization. These indicators have included the development of an Islamic feminist theology since the 1970s onwards, commonly called "Islamic feminism", and the emergence of a religious grass-root activism, more significantly since the 9/11 attacks. American Muslim women activists claim visibility in the public sphere and within the US Islamic religious landscape. What are their demands, challenges and strategies ? What are the internal and external factors that have led up to the growing visibility of women and women's issues in American Islam ? How specifically has the increased role of women affected American-Islamic institutions, beliefs or practices ? Those are some of the questions we raise in our thesisThe results are based on a fieldwork (semi-directive interviews and participant observation). We also use the data of a report on the inclusion of women within the American mosque published in 2013. The transformations linked to the increasing women’s participation in the mosque are emphasized
Matri, Khaoula. "Port du voile : représentations et pratiques du corps chez les femmes tunisiennes." Thesis, Paris 5, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA05H005/document.
Full textThis research sheds lights on veiling: representations and body practices among Tunisian women. the target of this research is to understand the process which reigns the perception of Tunisian women- who are renewed to be the most modern and the most emancipated in the Islamic world – of different forms of veil which is associated to Islam.In order to carry out this research ,she has opted an approach that combines (1) the socio-anthropological analysis concerning the social production of the "female body", adoption, adaptation of standards related to women’s behavior in the societies of Islamic traditions, Historical approaches, theology and policies focusing on veiling in the current context of globalization and identity crises .(3) the empirical study is based on a qualitative survey of women converted to veiling; the main target of this research is to understand their motivations, their strategies, and the practices which are getting different in public spaces. In fact, many practices were forbidden by the traditions are no longer forbidden today and veiled women tend to justify them. This research has allowed us to find out the references and the ideological motivations shared by veiled women and their followers;The research has also shed lights on The diversity of the phenomenon at the level of its forms as well as the uses and the meanings associated to it by the social actors, whether in terms of the relationship between modernity and tradition, secularism and reactivation of religion forms or in terms of liberation and alienation , self-assertion and gregarious reflex
Books on the topic "Féminismes religieux"
Auffret, Séverine. Sapphô et compagnie: Pour une histoire des idées féministes. Loverval: Labor, 2006.
Find full textDumais, Monique. Diversité des utilisations féministes du concept expériences des femmes en sciences religieuses. Ottawa, Ont: ICREF/CRIAW, 1993.
Find full textColloque, Groupe Orsay. Engagements féministes: Entre le politique et le religieux, ici et ailleurs, avant et maintenant. Paris: Groupe Orsay, 2006.
Find full textM, Schumacher Michele, ed. Femmes dans le Christ: Vers un nouveau féminisme. Toulouse: Carmel, 2003.
Find full textDumais, Monique. Diversité des utilisations féministes du concept expériences des femmes en sciences religieusses. Ottawa: CRIAW/ICREF, 1993.
Find full textA, O'Grady Kathleen, Gilroy Ann L, and Gray Janette, eds. Bodies, lives, voices: Gender in theology. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1998.
Find full textGoritcheva, Tatiana. Filles de Job. Paris: Nouvelle cité, 1989.
Find full textBarstow, Anne Llewellyn. Joan of Arc: Heretic, mytic, shaman. Lewiston, N.Y: E. Mellen Press, 1986.
Find full text1943-, Daviau Pierrette, and Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion, eds. Pour libérer la théologie: Variations autour de la pensée féministe d'Ivone Gebara. [Québec]: Presses de l'Université Laval, 2002.
Find full textColline, Françoise. Ames fortes, esprits libres. Paris: Descartes & Cie, 1996.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Féminismes religieux"
Rochefort, Florence. "Genre, engagement religieux et féminismes dans les Amériques." In Femmes, féminismes et religions dans les Amériques, 5–11. Presses universitaires de Provence, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pup.36113.
Full textAnwar, Zainah. "Négocier les droits des femmes sous la loi religieuse en Malaisie." In Féminismes islamiques, 151–71. La Fabrique Éditions, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/lafab.ali.2020.01.0151.
Full text"Déconstruire un phallocentrisme religieux: étude de la politique du Vatican." In Spiritualités féministes, 179–219. Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9782760643192-006.
Full text"5 L’opposition au programme ECR au nom d’arguments de nature laïque et féministe." In La fin de la culture religieuse, 145–202. Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9782760647688-006.
Full textAnastasaki, Maria. "Les effets des privilèges de genre, de race et de religion sur les communautés scientifiques et féministes." In Expliquer, comprendre et débattre autour du religieux. Neutralité ou engagement ?, 115–32. Presses de l'Université Laval, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1h0p23r.10.
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