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Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil: Challenging Historical and Modern Stereotypes
 
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Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil: Challenging Historical and Modern Stereotypes [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Katherine Bullock

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Synopsis

Until now the bulk of the literature about the veil has been written by outsiders who do not wear the veil. This literature often assumes a condescending tone about veiled women, assuming that they are making uniformed choices about veiling that makes them subservient to a patriarchal culture and religion."Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil" offers an alternative viewpoint, based on the thoughts and experiences of Muslim women themselves. This is the first time a clear and concise book-length argument has been made for the compatibility between veiling and modernity. Bullock uncovers positive aspects of the veil that are frequently not perceived by outsiders. "Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil" looks at the colonial roots of the negative Western stereotype of the veil. The author argues that in consumer capitalist cultures, women can find wearing the veil liberating from the stifling beauty game that promotes unsafe and unhealthy ideal body images for women. The book also includes an extensive bibliography on topics related to Muslim women and the veil.

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A Fresh, Intelligent Approach to a Complex Topic 30. März 2003
Von Ovamir Anjum - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
Rethinking Muslim Women

Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil by Katherine Bullock is a valuable addition to the voices of Muslim women writing about the issue most immediate and peculiar to their life: Veil. Broadly, we can divide the recent literature in English about Islam and women into two categories: first, that produced by Muslim activists and scholars in the West who defend or present the Islamic position, and read primarily by the activist or traditional Muslims; second, that produced by the Western academicians, intellectuals and feminists or Muslims who are thoroughly Westernized. The two types of literature remain almost mutually exclusive and isolated. The first kind of literature only marginally or very generally addresses the challenges, threats and questions posed by the second kind of literature to the Islamic position about women. Some of it is apologetic, compromising and adaptationist, but largely it is straightforward and simple, and at times, even simplistic.

While innumerable books about Islam and women have mushroomed in the contemporary Western as well as Islamic world, lately, a new tradition of Western Muslim women writers has emerged that attempts to combine the two traditions. Some of these works could be regarded as academic and scholarly from the Western viewpoint, and Dr. Bullock's present work is one such work. According to her self-description, she writes "as a practicing Muslim woman," who embraces a certain kind of "feminism" (p. xvii). Her aim is to defend Hijab in the Western intellectual world and "to break the equation: `modernity equals unveil'"(p.xxi).

The book first presents and analyzes different views about Hijab among the Muslim women from different backgrounds, all of whom are in one way or other concerned about women's rights and want to transcend the traditional house-bound image of women. On one hand, in order to present the real inside story of Hijab, she interviews several Muslim women in the West, most of whom practice Islam and wear Hijab. On the other, she presents an in-depth critique of the infamous books of Moroccan secular feminist Fatima Mernissi whose pernicious condemnation of Hijab as well as the Islamic tradition is hailed and quoted widely in the West as an authority. In the end, the author synthesized these viewpoints and concludes with an alternative theory of Hijab that challenges the unfair stereotypes in the West as well as what she calls the "oppressive tradition" in the Muslim world.

In an insightful classification of the Western views about the Muslim women, she divides them into three types: the pop culture view of oppressed Muslim women perpetrated by the Western politicians and demagogues for the consumption of popular ignorant culture and that serves to justify interventionist and imperialist policies every now and then. The second is the dominant trend of "liberal feminism" prevalent in the liberal academia and among the feminists. The third trend within the academia is a fresh approach embraced by some historians and anthropologists who emphasize understanding the Muslim culture in its own terms and seek to avoid the Western Orientalist prejudices and labels. The author calls this third approach the "contextual approach" and claims to belong to it (p. xvii).

The author hails a new Hijab movement among the Muslim women across the Muslim world that is growing and resisting against the backdrop of both oppressions of modernity as well as tradition. On one hand, the Muslim women are withstanding the bans of Hijab and violations of basic rights in Muslim countries like Tunisia and Turkey and in the West like in France, and on the other they are seeking to eliminate the erosion of women's rights in the Muslim world at the hands of rigid tradition, extremist clerics and the ignorant masses. "There are those, including myself," she says, "who see the Quran and the Sunnah, and the first community as equality and justice for women and men" but she laments "the way of life distorted by the cultural accretions over the last 1400 years." She sees the kind of complete seclusion of women that keeps them from participating in the society, workforce, politics and education as an "oppressive tradition of the past."

13 von 13 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
interesting and thorough 1. Mai 2004
Von "chiquita4724" - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
This book is very much needed in America today. There are so many misconceptions about Muslim women who wear hijab, and this book does a wonderful job of explaining the complex reasons why women choose to wear it. Of course there is opression going on in some areas of the world, but that doesn't mean that every Muslim women who covers is forced to! Bullock explains in great detail the politics, cultural relativism and individuality that is expressed in the veil without the bias of ethnocentrism. However, if you are not ready to accept that you cannot generalize about all Muslim women, this book is not for you.
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You think you're modern? 5. Dezember 2009
Von Jenny Knight - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
Read this book.

To observe, you must look. To look, you must have an object at which to stare. But what if an object refuses to be seen? Worse, what if an object can see you AND refuses to be seen?

Fascinating, fascinating book. If you think of yourself as a feminist, as modern, as progressive, as tolerant, etc. READ THIS BOOK. And learn how to think again.

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