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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
15 pages in length. The writer discusses at length the extent to which Islamic women still cannot overcome centuries of gender oppression even in the twenty-first century. Bibliography lists 14 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCwmnislfem.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
putting forth their own critical thought process to determine if what they are being asked to follow is right or wrong. Islams continued mistreatment of and degradation toward women
in light of the influence feminism has had so far in the twenty-first century reflects a direct correlation with such blind ideology in that Islamic men are following the patriarchal
lessons of their fathers and grandfathers who themselves were indoctrinated with erroneous and harmful philosophies about gender construct; it is not within their ethical composition to understand how and why
their behavior is both wholly unacceptable and inhumane from a platform of human enlightenment. However, therein resides the conflict: their cultural programming does not provide for the capacity to
see any err in their ways. II. THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES Despite the fact post-Taliban efforts have attempted to provide some semblance of
womens rights in an era of expanding free speech and other civil liberties, those rights may exist in thought and limited application, but they are in constant struggle with the
governmental forces that want to maintain a patriarchal ceiling on the extent to which women realize any significant departure from their traditional gender roles. Inasmuch as the barricade toward
womens rights "remains deeply rooted in traditional Islamic culture" (Witte 2005:A24), it stands to reason how the time since Taliban rule was overturned is hardly enough to completely wipe out
hundreds of years of gender oppression; as such, the government is not entirely keen on the idea of womens emancipation in virtually any way. "Education and human rights are
far more important than whether or not a woman wears a burka...We are not talking about feminism in Afghanistan-were talking about basic human rights (Benet 2001). When one examines the
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