Beverly Mack is professor emerita of African studies in the Department of African and African American Studies at the University of Kansas. Her books include Educating Muslim Women: The West African Legacy of Nana Asma'u (with Jean Boyd) and Muslim Women Sing: Hausa Popular Song. She has written widely on Muslim women, particularly scholars, in Nigeria.
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Description
List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Notes on Terminology, Names, and Orthography Introduction: Muslim Women as Change Agents in Nineteenth-Century Nigeria and the Contemporary United States Part I: Women Transform Society Chapter 1. Transmission through Generations: Nigerian 'Yan Taru in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries Chapter 2. Muslim Women's Roles and Scholarship Chapter 3. 'Yan Taru's Role in Twentieth- and Twenty-First Century Nigerian Education Chapter 4. Fodiology: 'Yan Taru in North America Part 2 Piety and Poetry Chapter 5. The Sanctity of Knowledge and Women's Authority Chapter 6. Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Women's Scholarship Chapter 7. Uwardeji Maryam and Hubbare Residences Chapter 8. Nigerian 'Yan Taru Instruction and Curricula Conclusion Notes Glossary References Index
Through a detailed history of Muslim women's education in Hausaland and contemporary North America, Mack brings her deep knowledge of Hausa, poetry, and Islam to bear on how we understand Muslim women as educators, poets, and essential actors in their societies. This is an important book that will change how people think about Muslim women." - Katrina Daly Thompson, author of Zimbabwe's Cinematic Arts: Language, Power, Identity "An excellent addition to scholarship on Nigerian religious studies. With a firm foundation in the religious, social, and political history of Nigeria from the nineteenth century to the present day, Equals in Learning and Piety is engaging, insightful, and wide-ranging. Mack's analysis of the impact of 'Yan Taru on Black Muslims in the United States in particular underscores the dialectical tension between the local and the global, national and transnational, gender and generation in the age of neoliberal globalization." - Olufemi O. Vaughan, author of Religion and the Making of Nigeria