Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza, Melanie Johnson-DeBaufre, Stephanie Mitchem
{"title":"Editors’ Introduction","authors":"Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza, Melanie Johnson-DeBaufre, Stephanie Mitchem","doi":"10.2979/fsr.2007.23.2.1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Editors’ Introduction Kate M. Ott and Zayn Kassam With a new year come new changes at JFSR. In this issue, we are announcing a new annual award named in honor of Rev. Dr. Katie Geneva Cannon, experimenting with a new section called Living It Out articles, and celebrating coeditor Zayn Kassam’s new appointment and subsequent stepping down from the journal’s editorial team. Significant changes often highlight what stays constant. The content of this issue crosses religious traditions and historic time periods to remind us that even when religious texts, images, and practices produce gender oppression, female-identified practitioners, goddesses, and believers confound and disrupt patriarchy. The articles section of this issue follows a historical trajectory while taking the reader on a global journey using examples of material culture to show the nuanced agency and presence of the feminine, even in the absence of female-identified religious actors. In the first article, Juyan Zhang details the origins and identities of two Buddhist goddesses, Tārā and Cundā, through an analysis of stone and metal images to trace the prototypes for these goddesses in Indic and Tibetan traditions. Gillian Alban then takes the reader to the Mediterranean to witness the ways in which statues of and literature about Medusa evidence the power of female figures’ “hold on the male unconscious in rising above castigation, asserting their amazing procreative force over life and death, enabled through Medusa’s stunning tale and transfixing gaze” (49). The nuanced navigation of patriarchal religious culture is further examined by Rosemary Admiral, moving us farther west and south to the premodern Islamic areas of North Africa and al-Andalus. Admiral investigates women’s sexual agency through fatwas documenting marital disputes. Examples of women refusing sex from this time period can, Admiral argues, show women as sexual agents negotiating consent in marriage, akin to modern circumstances. [End Page 1] The final two essays in this section cover more modern periods while presenting no less complicated negotiations of gender and feminism across religious and domestic spaces. In “Intertwined Histories: Muslim Domesticity and the Harem in the Eyes of a Swedish Nineteenth-Century Protestant Feminist,” Ragnhild Johnsrud Zorgati interrogates the complicated feminist claims of Swedish novelist Fredrika Bremer through an analysis of her encounter with Muslim women in Jerusalem in the spring of 1859. Zorgati argues that counter to other white European feminists of the time, Bremer critiqued white patriarchy and supported a program for female liberation. The final essay in the section provides a theoretical frame by which to read the women’s place/space and presence/absence in all the previously mentioned examples. Wai Ching Angela Wong draws upon Jacques Derrida’s presence/absence dialectic and Victor Turner’s liminality of religion to trace women subjects “Beyond the Boundary of Home” in the context of Hong Kong, as her title suggests. She provides cases from four different religious traditions, reinforcing that religiously gendered subjects are never static or singular. With poetry, Julie R. Enszer embodies the experience of female present absence in comparison to male religious and political leaders. Juxtaposing the mundane and the spiritual, political and local, patriarchy and liberation, she vividly depicts the truth of her response: “but none of us know / what counts— /who counts— / in the eyes of G!d” (130). Even though the particularity of experience cannot be fully known by the reader, the affirmation of worth and dignity in the face of religious dismissal, racial politics, and gender oppression resonates. For this issue, we have inaugurated a “mash-up” of the feature Living It Out and traditional articles. This hybrid category combines an anonymously peer-reviewed constructive essay with a critical reflection on the development of feminist (religious) movements seeking to transform systems of injustice in the academy, religious institutions and communities, and the broader society. Carine Plancke focuses on a UK yoga practice called womb yoga in “Reclaiming Yoga as a Practice of Female Empowerment.” Through ethnographic research, including participant observation and interviews, she explores the feminist potential of womb yoga. In the final article of this section and the issue, Darryl Stephens outlines the Christian ethical act of bearing witness as a way of leveraging privilege in solidary with...","PeriodicalId":44347,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF FEMINIST STUDIES IN RELIGION","volume":"49 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JOURNAL OF FEMINIST STUDIES IN RELIGION","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2979/fsr.2007.23.2.1","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"哲学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"RELIGION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Editors’ Introduction Kate M. Ott and Zayn Kassam With a new year come new changes at JFSR. In this issue, we are announcing a new annual award named in honor of Rev. Dr. Katie Geneva Cannon, experimenting with a new section called Living It Out articles, and celebrating coeditor Zayn Kassam’s new appointment and subsequent stepping down from the journal’s editorial team. Significant changes often highlight what stays constant. The content of this issue crosses religious traditions and historic time periods to remind us that even when religious texts, images, and practices produce gender oppression, female-identified practitioners, goddesses, and believers confound and disrupt patriarchy. The articles section of this issue follows a historical trajectory while taking the reader on a global journey using examples of material culture to show the nuanced agency and presence of the feminine, even in the absence of female-identified religious actors. In the first article, Juyan Zhang details the origins and identities of two Buddhist goddesses, Tārā and Cundā, through an analysis of stone and metal images to trace the prototypes for these goddesses in Indic and Tibetan traditions. Gillian Alban then takes the reader to the Mediterranean to witness the ways in which statues of and literature about Medusa evidence the power of female figures’ “hold on the male unconscious in rising above castigation, asserting their amazing procreative force over life and death, enabled through Medusa’s stunning tale and transfixing gaze” (49). The nuanced navigation of patriarchal religious culture is further examined by Rosemary Admiral, moving us farther west and south to the premodern Islamic areas of North Africa and al-Andalus. Admiral investigates women’s sexual agency through fatwas documenting marital disputes. Examples of women refusing sex from this time period can, Admiral argues, show women as sexual agents negotiating consent in marriage, akin to modern circumstances. [End Page 1] The final two essays in this section cover more modern periods while presenting no less complicated negotiations of gender and feminism across religious and domestic spaces. In “Intertwined Histories: Muslim Domesticity and the Harem in the Eyes of a Swedish Nineteenth-Century Protestant Feminist,” Ragnhild Johnsrud Zorgati interrogates the complicated feminist claims of Swedish novelist Fredrika Bremer through an analysis of her encounter with Muslim women in Jerusalem in the spring of 1859. Zorgati argues that counter to other white European feminists of the time, Bremer critiqued white patriarchy and supported a program for female liberation. The final essay in the section provides a theoretical frame by which to read the women’s place/space and presence/absence in all the previously mentioned examples. Wai Ching Angela Wong draws upon Jacques Derrida’s presence/absence dialectic and Victor Turner’s liminality of religion to trace women subjects “Beyond the Boundary of Home” in the context of Hong Kong, as her title suggests. She provides cases from four different religious traditions, reinforcing that religiously gendered subjects are never static or singular. With poetry, Julie R. Enszer embodies the experience of female present absence in comparison to male religious and political leaders. Juxtaposing the mundane and the spiritual, political and local, patriarchy and liberation, she vividly depicts the truth of her response: “but none of us know / what counts— /who counts— / in the eyes of G!d” (130). Even though the particularity of experience cannot be fully known by the reader, the affirmation of worth and dignity in the face of religious dismissal, racial politics, and gender oppression resonates. For this issue, we have inaugurated a “mash-up” of the feature Living It Out and traditional articles. This hybrid category combines an anonymously peer-reviewed constructive essay with a critical reflection on the development of feminist (religious) movements seeking to transform systems of injustice in the academy, religious institutions and communities, and the broader society. Carine Plancke focuses on a UK yoga practice called womb yoga in “Reclaiming Yoga as a Practice of Female Empowerment.” Through ethnographic research, including participant observation and interviews, she explores the feminist potential of womb yoga. In the final article of this section and the issue, Darryl Stephens outlines the Christian ethical act of bearing witness as a way of leveraging privilege in solidary with...
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion, the oldest interdisciplinary, inter-religious feminist academic journal in religious studies, is a channel for the publication of feminist scholarship in religion and a forum for discussion and dialogue among women and men of differing feminist perspectives. Active electronic and combined electronic/print subscriptions to this journal include access to the online backrun.