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Women, Patronage, and Self-Representation in Islamic Societies
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03 August 2000

A rare look at female empowerment in the Muslim world.
The first to combine the study of representation, gender theory, and Muslim women from a historical and geographical perspective, this book examines where women have represented themselves in art, architecture, and the written word in the Muslim world. The authors explore the gendering and implicit power relations present in the positioning of subject and object in the visual field and look specifically at occasions when women publicly adopted the stance of the viewer, speaker, writer, or patron.
Contributors include Ellison Banks Findly, Elizabeth Brown Frierson, Salah M. Hassan, Nancy Micklewright, Leslie Peirce, Kishwar Rizvi, D. Fairchild Ruggles, Yasser Tabbaa, Lucienne Thys-Senoçak, and Ethel Sara Wolper.
"This book deals with issues of women's patronage within the Islamic world which are placed within a theoretical framework of wider concerns of women's patronage and self-representation, and which provide a series of specific historically and regionally differentiated cases. Other recent writing on the status and power of women within the Islamic world is either monographic in its treatment of one period or moves almost immediately to present concerns. The authors challenge the received wisdom on the place and the agency of elite women in Islamic societies by examining their public personas—the buildings and artifacts carrying their names." — Renata Holod, coauthor of The Contemporary Mosque: Architects, Clients and Designs Since the 1950s
List of Illustrations
Preface
1. Vision and Power: An Introduction
D. Fairchild Ruggles
2. Dayfa Khatun, Regent Queen and Architectual Patron
Yasser Tabbaa
3. Princess Safwat al-Dunya wa al-Din and the Production of Sufi Buildings and Hagiographies in Pre-Ottoman Anatolia
Ethel Sara Wolper
4. Gender and Sexual Propriety in Ottoman Royal Women's Patronage
Leslie Peirce
5. The Yeni Valide Mosque Complex of Eminonu, Istanbul (1597-1665): Gender and Vision in Ottoman Architecture
Lucienne Thys-Senocak
6. Women's Wealth and Styles of Giving: Perspectives from Buddhist, Jain, and Mughal Sites
Ellison Banks Findly
7. Gendered Patronage: Women and Benevolence during the Early Safavid Empire
Kishwar Rizvi
8. Public and Private for Ottoman Women of the Nineteenth Century
Nancy Micklewright
9. Mirrors Out, Mirrors In: Domestication and Rejection of the Foreign in Late-Ottoman Women's Magazines
Elizabeth Brown Frierson
10. "Nothing Romantic about It!" A Critique of Orientalist Representation in the Installations of Houria Niati
Salah Hassan
Bibliography
About the Authors
Index