Description
This book is a study of the historical record of Muslim women's property rights and equity. Based on Islamic court documents of fifteenth-century Granada-documents that show a high degree of women's involvement-the book examines women's legal entitlements to acquire property as well as the social and economic significance of these rights to Granada's female population and, by extension, to women in other Islamic societies.
The microhistory of women's property rights is placed in a comparative historical, social, and economic context and is examined using a theoretical framework that suggests how this book's conclusions might coexist with the Islamic feminist discourse on the law as a patriarchal system, serving to highlight both the uniqueness and the limitations of the Islamic case. The specifics presented in the case studies reveal the broader structures, constructs, rules, conditions, factors, and paradigms that shaped women's property rights under Islamic law. They show that women's property rights were more than just part of a legal system; they were the product of a legal philosophy and a pervasive paradigm that made property ownership a normal construct of the Muslim woman's legal persona and a norm of her existence.
About the Author
Maya Shatzmiller is Professor of History at the University of Western Ontario.
Reviews
Despite its subtitle, Maya Shatzmiller's book reaches far beyond the territorial and chronological confines of 15th-century Granada. Her focus is not so much on Granada itself as on using the example of this region as an entry point for examination of the broader topic of women's property rights in the pre-modern Islamic world and beyond... There is much to be contemplated here. -- Olivia Remie Constable * Islamic Law and Society *
Book Information
ISBN 9780674025011
Author Maya Shatzmiller
Format Hardback
Page Count 230
Imprint Harvard University, Islamic Legal Studies
Publisher Harvard University, Islamic Legal Studies
Weight(grams) 658g
Dimensions(mm) 235mm * 156mm * 19mm