Men in Islam

Ziauddin Sardar confesses his shortcomings as a Muslim man, Merryl Wyn Davies asks what exactly is the problem with men, Abdennur Prado grapples with Muslim masculinities, Ziba Mir Hosseini tries to get out of the dead-end of male superiority justified by the Sharia, Kecia Ali is exasperated with the omnipresent male scholar, Asma Afsaruddin argues that the history of Islam includes people who were not men, Saleck Mohamed Val is impressed by traditional female commentators of the Qur’an, Shamim Miah is disgusted by Pakistani men who groom vulnerable teenage girls, Tanjil Rashid argues that Islamists like Syed Qutb are complex men, Stefano Bigliardi suggests that men who follow the flat-earth ideology of Turkish creationists Haroon Yahya need psychotherapy, Leyla Jagiella relates her painful experiences as a woman who was a man, Alev Adil extolls the beauty of men, and Jenny Taylor thinks it’s time both men and women were a bit more chaste.

In this issue

  • Culture

    Ten Species of Angry Muslim Men

    You are sitting comfortably in an assembly of Muslim men. Women are, as usual, segregated and safely secluded in a different room – as far as…

  • Biennale
    Art

    The Aesthetic of Promise

    The Venice Biennale is regarded as one of the most prestigious cultural events in the international calendar. Its history dates back to 1895; since…

    Marjorie Allthorpe-Guyton
  • Muslim young woman with hennaed hands
    Women

    Other Than Men

    Official pre-modern histories of Islam typically tell the stories of prominent men and their lives. Unofficial chronicles and literary sources…

    Asma Afsaruddin
  • Critical Muslim magazines

    Ideas, inspiration and ground-breaking thinking on Islam direct to you postbox (or inbox)

    from just £3.49 a month