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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Anna-Mari Almila , David InglisPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780367193010ISBN 10: 0367193019 Pages: 316 Publication Date: 08 January 2019 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsList of Figures List of Tables Notes on Contributors Introduction: The Veil across the Globe in Politics, Everyday Life, and Fashion (Anna-Mari Almila) Part 1: Politics Neoliberalization and Homo Islameconomicus: The Politics of Women’s Veiling in Turkey (Yıldız Atasoy) Discourses of Veiling and the Precarity of Choice: Representations in Post-9/11 US (Tabassum F. Ruby) Wearing a Veil in the French Context of Laïcité (Anne Fornerod) 2007/8: The Winter of the Veiled Women in Israel (Tamar Elor) Veiling Narratives: Discourses of Multiculturalism, Acceptability and Citizenship in Canada (Shelina Kassam and Naheed Mustafa) Veiling and Unveiling in Central Asia: Beliefs and Practices, Tradition and Modernity (Marianne Kamp and Noor Borbieva) Part 2: From Politics to Fashion Iran’s Compulsory Hijab: From Politics and Religious Authority to Fashion Shows (Faegheh Shirazi) The Fashions and Politics of Facial Hair in Turkey: The Case of Islamic Men (Nazlı Alimen) Representing the Veil in Contemporary Australian Media: From ‘Ban the Burqa’ to ‘Hijabi’ Bloggers (Branka Prodanovic and Susie Khamis) Part 3: Fashion and Anti-Fashion Modest Fashion and Anti-Fashion (Reina Lewis) Veiling, Fashion and the (Per)formative Role of Dress in Niger (Adeline Masquelier) The ‘Discipline of the Veil’ Among Converts to Islam in France and Quebec: Framing Gender and Expressing Femininity (Géraldine Mossière) Muslim Youth Practicing Veiling in Berlin: Modernity, Morality and Aesthetics (Synnøve Bendixsen) Fashioning Selves: Biographic Pathways of Hijabi Women in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Gisele Fonseca Chagas and Solange Riva Mezabarba) Part 4: Industries, Images, Materialities Culture Industries and Marketplace Dynamics (Özlem Sandıkcı) Images of Desire: Creating Virtue and Value in an Indonesian Islamic Lifestyle Magazine (Carla Jones) Smart-ening Up the Hijab: The Materiality of Contemporary British Muslim Veiling in the Physical and the Digital (Shehnaz Suterwalla) Part 5: Gender, Space, Community Veiling, Gender and Space: On the Fluidity of ‘Public’ and ‘Private’ (Anna-Mari Almila) Spacialised Veiling and a Critique of the Public/Private Dichotomy: A View from a Town in North India (Janaki Abraham) Hui Women and the Headscarf in China (Xiaoyan Wang) Constructions and Reconstructions of ‘Appropriate Dress’ in the Diaspora: Young Somali Women and Social Control in Finland (Anu Isotalo) Cover Their Face: Masks, Masking, and Masquerades in Historical-Anthropological Context (David Inglis) The Amish Prayer Cap as a Symbol that Bounds the Community (Jana M. Hawley) Veiling Studies and Globalization Studies (David Inglis and Anna-Mari Almila)Reviews'Through an impressive array of thought-provoking essays, the reader is presented with contemporary, and historical, understandings of veils and veiling in various parts of the world. We hear the stories of women-contextualized by scholars from a variety of disciplines-and in listening to their voices we begin to understand the complexity of meaning hidden behind the veil.' - Nancy Nason-Clark, University of New Brunswick, Canada `Through an impressive array of thought-provoking essays, the reader is presented with contemporary, and historical, understandings of veils and veiling in various parts of the world. We hear the stories of women-contextualized by scholars from a variety of disciplines-and in listening to their voices we begin to understand the complexity of meaning hidden behind the veil.' - Nancy Nason-Clark, University of New Brunswick, Canada ‘Through an impressive array of thought-provoking essays, the reader is presented with contemporary, and historical, understandings of veils and veiling in various parts of the world. We hear the stories of women—contextualized by scholars from a variety of disciplines—and in listening to their voices we begin to understand the complexity of meaning hidden behind the veil.’ – Nancy Nason-Clark, University of New Brunswick, Canada Author InformationAnna-Mari Almila is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in Sociology of Fashion at London College of Fashion, University of the Arts London. David Inglis David Inglis is Professor of Sociology at the University of Exeter, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |