
Contents
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Female Authority in Islam Female Authority in Islam
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Online Engagement with the Writing of Female Preachers Online Engagement with the Writing of Female Preachers
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Data and Design Data and Design
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Findings Findings
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Women Get Fewer Page Views Women Get Fewer Page Views
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Women Get More Comments Women Get More Comments
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Female Preachers Get Substantial Engagement from Men Female Preachers Get Substantial Engagement from Men
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Commenters on Women’s Documents Are More Geographically Diverse Commenters on Women’s Documents Are More Geographically Diverse
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Women Get More Positive Comments Than Men Women Get More Positive Comments Than Men
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Discussion Discussion
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Acknowledgments Acknowledgments
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Notes Notes
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References References
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28 Islamically Framed Mobilization in Tunisia Ansar al-Sharia in the Aftermath of the Arab Uprisings
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24 The Rise and Impact of Muslim Women Preaching Online
Get accessRichard A. Nielsen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Published:10 February 2021
Cite
Abstract
Female Muslim preachers are on the rise online, including in some conservative Islamic traditions such as the Salafi movement. The prevailing wisdom is that religion is the key factor explaining the increase and impact of women’s preaching. In this view, religious ideas about gender segregation create a need for female preachers who preach about “women’s issues” to exclusively female audiences. This chapter argues instead for a social movement logic: female preachers help Islamic social movements reach new audiences of both women and men. In this view, religious ideas prohibiting gender mixing are not the cause of women’s preaching, but rather a normative constraint that female preachers circumvent by preaching online. Data from a large Islamic website show that female preachers are reaching mixed gender audiences and eliciting positive reactions, especially from men, supporting the social movement logic.
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