Women's bodies have become a battleground.
Around the world, people argue about veiling, schooling
for Afghan girls, and "SlutWalk" protests, all of which
involve issues of women's sexuality and freedom.
Globalization, with its emphasis on human rights and
individuality, heats up these arguments. In
Of
Virgins and Martyrs, David Jacobson takes the
reader on a fascinating tour of how self-identity
developed throughout history and what individualism
means for Muslim societies struggling to maintain a
sense of honor in a globalized twenty-first
century.
Some patriarchal societies
have come to see women’s control of their own sexuality
as a threat to a way of life that goes back thousands of
years. Many trace their lineage to tribal cultures that
were organized around the idea that women’s virginity
represents the honor of male relatives and the good of
the community at large. Anyone or anything that
influences women to the contrary is considered a
corrupting and potentially calamitous force.
Jacobson analyzes the connection
between tribal patriarchy and Muslim radicalism through
an innovative tool—the tribal patriarchy index. This
index helps to illuminate why women's sexuality, dress,
and image so compel militant Muslim outrage and
sometimes violent action, revealing a deeper human story
of how women's status defines competing moral visions of
society and why this present clash is erupting with such
ferocity.