Tham khảo Nana Asma’u

  1. David Westerlund wrote: "She continued to be a source of inspiration to the present day." Mary Wren Bivins, Telling Stories, Making Histories: Women, Words and Islam in Nineteenth-Century Hausaland and the Sokoto Caliphate. London: Heinemann, 2007.
  2. Boyd, Jean (1989). The Caliph's Sister: Nana Asma'u 1793–1865: Teacher, Poet and Islamic Leader. London: Frank Cass & Co. Ltd. ISBN 0-7146-4067-0.
  3. Excerpt from Mack, Beverly B., and Jean Boyd, One Woman’s Jihad: Nana Asma’u, Scholar and Scribe. Includes two translated poems of Nana Asma'u.
  4. Jean Boyd and Murray Last quote the Algerian scholar Ismael Hamet writing for a French audience in 1898, lamenting the "Ligues Feministes d'Europe" did not know of Nana Asma'u's legacy. See "The Role of Women as 'Agents Religieux' in Sokoto", p. 283.
  5. Beverly B. Mack, "Book Reviews", African Studies Review, Volume 33, Issue 2, September 1990, pp. 219–220.

Tài liệu tham khảo

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