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Zahra Ayubi is a scholar of women and gender in premodern and modern Islamic ethics. She specializes in feminist philosophy of Islam and has published on gendered concepts of ethics, justice, and religious authority, and on Muslim feminist thought and American Muslim women's experiences. Her first book, Gendered Morality: Classical Islamic Ethics of the Self, Family, and Society (Columbia, 2019) rethinks the tradition of Islamic philosophical ethics from a feminist critical perspective. Developing a lens for a feminist philosophy of Islam, Ayubi analyzes constructions of masculinity, femininity, and gender relations in classic works of philosophical ethics by Abu Hamid Muhammad al-Ghazali, Nasir-ad Din Tusi, and Jalal ad-Din Davani. She interrogates how these thinkers conceive of the ethical human being as an elite male within a hierarchical cosmology built on the exclusion of women and nonelites. She calls for a philosophical turn in the study of gender in Islam based on resources for gender equality that are unlocked by feminist engagement with the Islamic ethical tradition.
Her next book project, Women as Humans: Life, Death, and Gendered Being in Islamic Medical Ethics (Columbia University Press) , is being supported by a three-year grant from the Greenwall Foundation Faculty Scholars Program . The project is a textual and ethnographic study of gender and gendered experiences in Muslim biomedical ethics. In addition to a focus on practical ethics, in this project she examines what are Muslim ontological, metaphysical, and existential conceptions of women.
Professor Ayubi teaches courses on Islam, gender in Islamic texts/Muslim thought, transnational Muslim feminist movements, Islamic medical ethics, and the core course in WGSS called Sex, Gender & Society.
" Authority and Epistemology in Islamic Medical Ethics of Women's Reproductive Health " Journal of Religious Ethics . 49: 2, 249-269, 2021.
" De-Universalizing Male Normativity: Feminist Methodologies for Studying Masculinity in Premodern Islamic Ethics Texts " Journal of Islamic Ethics . 4 (2020) 66-97. doi:10.1163/24685542-12340044
" Rearing Gendered Souls: Childhood and the Making of Muslim Manhood in Pre-Modern Islamic Ethics . " Journal of the American Academy of Religion. December 2019, Vol. 87, No. 4, pp. 1178–1208 doi:10.1093/jaarel/lfz072
" Thinking of Divorce " in Half of Faith: A Reader on American Muslim Marriage and Divorce in the Twenty-First Century . Kecia Ali, Ed. Boston: OpenBU, 2021. 129-134.
" Pre-Marital Counseling and Nikah Contract Writing Guide " in Tying the Knot: A Womanist/Feminist Guide to Muslim Marriage in America . Kecia Ali, Ed. Boston: Open BU, 2022. 55-66.
"Specific Issues in Muslim Divorce." The Family Law Review: Family Law Section of the State Bar of Georgia. December 2006. 1-5.
"Rereading Islamic Medieval Philosophy for Ethical Gender Relations in Modernity" Proceedings of the Religious and Philosophical Texts Symposium . Faculty of Theology, Istanbul University. 2012.
Deciding for Women: Gender and Authority in Islamic Biomedical Ethics