Academic Article
Muslim Women in Burkina Faso since the 1970s: Toward Recognition as Figures of Religious Authority?
- Hierarchies
-
Burkina Faso
- Articles de journaux (3615 items)
- Burkina 24 (279 items)
- Carrefour africain (33 items)
- FasoZine (116 items)
- L'Evénement (45 items)
- L'Observateur (61 items)
- L'Observateur Paalga (509 items)
- La Preuve (28 items)
- Le Pays (709 items)
- LeFaso.net (709 items)
- Mutations (13 items)
- San Finna (9 items)
- Sidwaya (1104 items)
- Publications islamiques (432 items)
- Al Mawadda (11 items)
- An-Nasr Trimestriel (16 items)
- An-Nasr Vendredi (318 items)
- L'Appel (48 items)
- L'Autre Regard (11 items)
- Le CERFIste (13 items)
- Le vrai visage de l'islam (15 items)
- Documents divers (Burkina Faso) (16 items)
- Photographies (Burkina Faso) (9 items)
- Références (Burkina Faso) (297 items)
- Articles de journaux (3615 items)
- Titre
- Muslim Women in Burkina Faso since the 1970s: Toward Recognition as Figures of Religious Authority?
- Résumé
- This paper examines how visibility and legitimacy have been defined and achieved by Muslim women who have contributed to the development of Islam in Burkina Faso since the 1970s. We undertake a transversal study of the trajectories of women belonging to different cohorts of Arabic- and French-educated Muslims. In doing so, we highlight identity markers closely associated with key moments in their lives (activism through associations or personal initiatives, religious studies, the pilgrimage to Mecca, and media activities). Through the lens of performativity, we show how women have progressively gained visibility within the Muslim community. And although figures of religious authority remain uniformly male, women are increasingly able to claim legitimacy thanks to their flexible approach.
- Journal
- Islamic Africa
- volume
- 7
- numéro
- 2
- première page
- 185
- dernière page
- 209
- Date
- 2016
- Langue
- Anglais
- Type
- Article de revue
- Couverture spatiale
- Burkina Faso
Fait partie de Muslim Women in Burkina Faso since the 1970s: Toward Recognition as Figures of Religious Authority?