
Sabat Khan
Articles
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Sep 29, 2024 |
t.ly | Sabat Khan
Islam, Women and Feminism ( 28 Sept 2024, NewAgeIslam.Com) Comment | CommentBy Sabat Khan, New Age Islam28 September 2024Muslim Feminists That Utilize Social Media To Dispel Prejudices And Promote Gender Equality Like Khadija Gbla (Activist Against Female Genital Mutilation) And Amani Al-Khatahtbeh (Muslim girl)Main Points:1.Social media gives underrepresented voices—Muslim women in particular—a big platform to express their uniqueness, confronts sexism, and engages in public conversation.
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Jul 30, 2024 |
t.ly | Sabat Khan
By Sabat Khan, New AgeIslam30 July2024Rumi's Teachings Promote Introspection andInclusivity, Making His Poetry A Vital Resource For Spiritual Seekers AndPractices TodayMain Points:1.Rumi's encounter with Shams ofTabriz shifted his focus from academic scholarship to a passionate explorationof Sufism and divine love. 2.Rumi's writings explore love,longing, and the connection to the divine, resonating with readers from diversecultural and spiritual backgrounds.
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Jul 8, 2024 |
t.ly | Sabat Khan
By Sabat Khan, New AgeIslam8 July 2024The mainidea of the article is how Parveen Shakir's poetry subverts the rhetoric ofwomen's liberation in its truest sense. The poets whose works are beingdiscussed reject patriarchy and gender bias while embracing the diversity ofintersectional identities. Her work encourages women to live as they like andfight for their rights, and it also promotes the idea that women are activesubjects who can control their own destiny.
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Oct 29, 2023 |
feminisminindia.com | Sabat Khan
John Berger’s book Ways of Seeing published in 1972 based on the BBC television program, is a very influential and captivating criticism of art. Through their work Berger talks about the ideas of capitalism, hegemonic masculinity, and how women are objectified in European oil paintings. Moreover, the main argument put up by Berger is that what we see is reflected is what we understand. In other words, what we see is influenced by what we know and believe (Berger, 1972).
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Aug 7, 2023 |
feminisminindia.com | Sabat Khan |Rohini Menon
The Turkish Novelist Elif Shafak’s, The Forty Rules of Love, is a beautifully woven tapestry of two intertwining narratives set in different time periods. While the book delves into the essence of love and spirituality, it also highlights the complex dilemma of marriage and delves deep into the exploration of female identity.
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