Success stories of Palestinian achievers from all over the world

Layla Abu-Lughod

Personal Info

  • Country of residence: United States
  • Gender: Female
  • Born in: 1952
  • Age: 71
  • Curriculum vitae :

Information

Laila Abu-Lughod (in English: Lila Abu-Lughod) (1952) is an American professor of Palestinian and Jewish descent on the mother's side. She specializes in anthropology and feminist studies and is the daughter of the Palestinian thinker Ibrahim Abu-Lughod and the sociologist Janet Abu-Lughod. Laila is currently a professor of anthropology, women's studies, and gender at Columbia University.

her life
Laila was born in 1952 to a Palestinian father and an American mother of Jewish origin. She studied in the United States and graduated from Carleton University in 1974. She obtained a Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1984. She was also awarded an honorary doctorate in 2006 from Carleton University.

her job
Laila Abu-Lughod held academic positions at Princeton University and New York University and became well known early in her academic career for her research on the Bedouins of the Awlad Ali tribe in Egypt. Her work has focused on three main areas: the relationship between cultural forms and power, the politics of knowledge and representation, and the dynamics of gender and the question of women's rights in the Middle East. In 2001, Laila delivered the Louis Henry Lecture at the University of Rochester, which is the most important annual series of lectures in the field of anthropology in the world.

Do Muslim women need saving?
Laila Abu-Lughod contributed to the discussions about the image of Muslim women in society, especially in the post-9/11 contexts, and the discussions that sparked them about the Middle East, Islam, and women's rights. It examines the validity and safety of these ideas. Abu-Lughod concludes that Muslim women, like other women of other religions and cultures, need to be dealt with within correct historical, social and ideological contexts. She believes that “saving” Muslim women involves racist ideas that portray Muslim societies as savage and barbaric. Religion is not only responsible for this situation, but there are many factors involved in the matter, such as poverty, education, government tyranny, international conflicts, and others. Laila Abu-Lughod's writing of this article and her involvement in these discussions that followed the 9/11 attacks were enough to make many compare her with Edward Said in postcolonial studies and orientalism.

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