Muslim Women and White Femininity  Paid

Reenactment and Resistance

by Haneen Shafeeq Ghabra (Author)
©2018, Textbook, X, 194 Pages
Media & Communication

HARDCOVER

eBook


Winner of the 2019 Outstanding Book of the Year Award for the International and Intercultural Communication Division (IICD) of the National Communication Association (NCA).

Muslim Women and White Femininity: Reenactment and Resistance is a much-needed book in a time when Muslim women are speaking out but also embodying White femininity. This book focuses on how Whiteness travels through Muslim women’s bodies, who in turn reenact or resist White womanhood, by examining three relevant archetypes: the Oppressed, the Advocate, and the Humanitarian Leader. The author aims to demonstrate the necessity of archetypal criticism as a method that can teach the reader or student how to deconstruct dominant discourses in the media. This book aims to address intercultural, gender, intersectional and critical communication courses but is also suited for those in the general public who wish to understand the deceptive nature of the media. Thus, at a time where Muslim women are being used as media objects by Western media, this book is crucial in analyzing how readers can begin to uncover dominant ideologies that are carried through and by Muslim women.

Cover
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Introduction
An Understanding of Ethics
Archetypes: Mapping out a Historical Context
White Western Feminism
Book Structure and Summary
Notes
Works cited
Chapter 2: Understanding the Postcolonial through Whiteness Performance and Intersectionality
A Postcolonial Overview: The Arab World
Intersectionality and Archetypal Criticism through Whiteness
Intersectional Feminism
Postcolonial-Archetypal Criticism through the Rhetoric of Whiteness
Notes
Works Cited
Chapter 3: Weaving Intersectionality through Narrative Criticism: Western Feminism and the Marginalization of Third World Women
Revisiting the Narrative Paradigm: Archetypal Criticism
Narratives of Key Officials through Femininity
Hillary Clinton
Elizabeth Cheney
Laura Bush
Narratives of Key Officials through Masculinity and Neoliberalism
George Bush
Barack Obama
Department of State’s Office of Global Women’s Issues
Narrative Criticism and Its Limitations
Notes
Works Cited
Chapter 4: Malala Yousafazai: The Oppressed Muslim Woman and the Search for Agency
Whiteness, Colonialism and Saving Muslim Women
Malala Yousafazai and the Performance of White Femininity
Performing White Femininity through “Terrorism” and Education
The Universality of Gender Oppression and the Rhetoric of Sameness
Romanticizing Power Structures
Disidentification
Malala: An Interview with Emma Watson
Conclusion: The Struggle for Agency
Notes
Works Cited
Chapter 5: Ayaan Hirsi Ali: The Advocate and the Rejection of Islam
Hirsi Ali’s Rhetoric of Sameness
Oppression of Women is Islam specific
Muslim Women are Subject to Domestic Abuse
The Hijab Is Oppressive and Monstrous
Arranged Marriages are a Form of Control
Genital Circumcision Is Islam Specific
Hirsi Ali and Foreign Policy: 9/11 and the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Hirsi Ali’s Denial of Racism
Conclusion: Beyond Ideological Homelands
Notes
Works Cited
Chapter 6: Queen Rania: The Humanitarian Leader and the Search for a Counter-Narrative
Colonial Modernity and Royalty
Transnational Motherhood
Heteronormativity: The Nuclear Family
Whiteness and the Logics of Education
Disidentification: Creating a Counter Narrative
Conclusion: Cultural Trespassing
Notes
Works Cited
Chapter 7: Conclusion: The Search for an Intersectional Feminist Ethic
Complicating the Matrix of Domination
The Implication of Agency for Muslim Women
An Intersectional Feminist Ethic
What Does an Intersectional Feminist Ethic Look Like?
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Pages:
X, 194
Year:
2018
ISBN (HARDBACK):
9781433152153 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781433152139 (Active)
ISBN (PDF):
9781433152122 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Oxford, Wien, 2018. X, 194 pp. 3 b/w ills.

Haneen Shafeeq Ghabra obtained her PhD in communication studies from the University of Denver and is currently Assistant Professor at Kuwait University’s Department of Mass Communication. She has won top paper awards numerous times, and publishes frequently on the topic of intersectional feminism.

"In her provocative book Muslim Women and White Femininity: Reenactment and Resistance, Haneen Ghabra urges us to rethink the way women of color including Muslim women perform and embody white femininity. Her refreshing text eloquently sheds light on hegemonic constructs in her attempt to move toward what she critically defines as intersectional feminist ethics." —Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Professor, Faculty of Law–Institute of Criminology and the School of Social Work and Public Welfare at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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