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CELIBACY (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   087289


Challenging the myth of the happy celibate: Muslim women negotiating contemporary / Imtoual, Alia; Hussein, Shakira   Journal Article
Imtoual, Alia Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract In recent decades, the age of marriage in many minority Muslim communities has risen so that significant numbers of Muslims in these contexts are remaining unmarried into their late 20 s and beyond. As with other communities in Western contexts, Muslim communities have also experienced a rising divorce rate, leading to many more single women. These social and demographic changes, combined with traditional attitudes towards female sexuality and virginity, have led to a rise in the number of women who have either never had a sexual encounter or who no longer have sexual encounters. Cultural discourses surrounding virginity and female celibacy frequently conflate the virtue of refusing sexual encounters outside of marriage with happiness and satisfaction at 'choosing the right path'. However, these discourses negate or downplay women's sexual desires and result in women often feeling trapped into having to perform the 'myth of the happy celibate'. To disrupt this myth is to unleash the potentially destructive power of female sexuality, while to openly challenge it is to risk being positioned as a 'slut'.
Key Words Sex  Virginity  Muslim Woman  Celibacy  Minority Communities  Islam 
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2
ID:   170178


Feminisation of Ascetic Celibacy in Haridwar / Hamaya, Mariko   Journal Article
Hamaya, Mariko Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Case studies of male–female ascetic couples in Haridwar in North India complicate the widespread knowledge that male Hindu renouncers are supposed to observe celibacy. Based on extended ethnographic work, this article investigates specifically how female ascetics tackle the dominant androcentric discourses and practise celibacy from a female point of view, focussing on their practice of sevā or spiritual service. The article argues that while female ascetics do not object to the androcentric ideology of celibacy, they follow it only partly, switching their focus from sexual abstinence to devotional sevā. Doing this, female ascetics value controlling emotion more than controlling sexual desire. Through the practice of sevā, they aim for fostering an attitude of devotion as a feminised manifestation of their efforts towards reaching spiritual attainment.
Key Words India  Gender  Sacrifice  Celibacy  Bhakti  Self 
Devotion  Haridwar  Hindu Ascetics,  Renouncers 
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3
ID:   137513


Let’s talk about sex: Australian Muslim online discussions / Marcotte, Roxanne D   Article
Marcotte, Roxanne D Article
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Summary/Abstract Sex talk is ubiquitous, yet often remains difficult within more conservative or religious milieus. However, online forums provide younger digital native Muslims with novel environments where they can discuss sex-related issues with one another. Listening to the views young Muslims share on online forums can shed some light onto how members of an Australian online virtual community frame and conceive of a number of sex-related issues, the questions they pose, the discussions that ensue, and the answers they contribute. The aim is to explore what forum discussions can tell us about the views, understanding, and framing of sex-related issues with which young Australian Muslims, living in Muslim minority context, are confronted in their own lives, those of their kin, or of members of their communities, while, simultaneously and paradoxically, reiterating an unproblematic normative “Islamic” position. Might online forums foster expressions of more creative indigenous and hybrid gendered discourses, as online forum discussions often remain open-ended? The dynamics of online discussions are explored by looking, first, at sexuality related issues within the confines of marriage and, second, sexuality-related issues outside of its confines
Key Words Australia  Internet  Sexuality  Rape  Virginity  Celibacy 
Forums  Hymenoplasty  Marital  Masturbation  Pre- and Extramarital Sex  STDs 
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4
ID:   177195


Vernacular Sexology from the Margins: A Woman and a Shudra / Gupta, Charu   Journal Article
Gupta, Charu Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article centres on the Hindi sexology writings of a woman, Yashoda Devi, and a Shudra, Santram B.A. In the context of an efflorescence of vernacular sexology literature in early twentieth-century North India, it explicates how their writings moved along different registers, whereby they envisaged a heterosexual ethics that relied on utopian and dystopian descriptions of modernity. Sexology in Hindi, particularly when construed from the margins, reified, constructed, destabilised and questioned sexual norms. The article argues that while largely operating within reformist sexology frames, their writings at times punctured dominant upper-caste, male-centric authority and created frictions in normative equations. Together, their writings contribute significantly to creating a vernacular archive of sexual sciences in India.
Key Words India  Gender  Sex  Celibacy  Hindi  Print 
Pleasure  Heterosexual  Santram B.A.  Yashoda Devi 
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