Sponsored

Punching Back - (New Anthropologies of Europe: Perspectives and Provocations) by Jasmijn Rana (Hardcover)

Create or manage registry

Sponsored

About this item

Highlights

  • In the Netherlands, girls and young women are increasingly active in women-only kickboxing.
  • About the Author: Jasmijn Rana is Assistant Professor at the Department of Cultural Anthropology at Leiden University, where she teaches in the fields of diversity, gender and sexuality, urban studies and qualitative research methods.
  • 180 Pages
  • Sports + Recreation, Sociology of Sports
  • Series Name: New Anthropologies of Europe: Perspectives and Provocations

Description



About the Book



"In the Netherlands, girls and young women are increasingly active in women-only kickboxing. The general assumption, in the Netherlands and in western Europe more broadly, is that women's sport is a form of secular, feminist empowerment. Muslim women's participation would then exemplify the incongruence of Islam with the modern, secular nation-state. Punching Back provides a detailed ethnographic study that contests this view by showing that young Muslim women who kickbox establish agentive selves by playing with gender norms, challenging expectations, and living out their religious subjectivities"--



Book Synopsis



In the Netherlands, girls and young women are increasingly active in women-only kickboxing. The general assumption, in the Netherlands and in western Europe more broadly, is that women's sport is a form of secular, feminist empowerment. Muslim women's participation would then exemplify the incongruence of Islam with the modern, secular nation-state. Punching Back provides a detailed ethnographic study that contests this view by showing that young Muslim women who kickbox establish agentive selves by playing with gender norms, challenging expectations, and living out their religious subjectivities.



Review Quotes




"Jasmijn Rana has written an engaging, well-crafted and long-anticipated ethnography of the intersectionally gendered and racialized experience of Muslim Dutch women, drawn from her own apprenticeship in women-only kickboxing venues in the southern neighbourhoods of The Hague." - Paul Silverstein, Reed College

"I thoroughly enjoyed reading this and feel that it makes a very important contribution to the fields of sport studies, martial arts studies, migration studies and the anthropology of Islam in Europe." - Alex Channon, University of Brighton




About the Author



Jasmijn Rana is Assistant Professor at the Department of Cultural Anthropology at Leiden University, where she teaches in the fields of diversity, gender and sexuality, urban studies and qualitative research methods.

Additional product information and recommendations

Sponsored

Similar items

Loading, please wait...

Your views

Loading, please wait...

More to consider

Loading, please wait...

Featured products

Loading, please wait...

Guest Ratings & Reviews

Disclaimer

Get top deals, latest trends, and more.

Privacy policy

Footer