ABSTRACT

Veils and veiling are controversial topics in social and political life, generating debates across the world. The veil is enmeshed within a complex web of relations encompassing politics, religion and gender, and conflicts over the nature of power, legitimacy, belief, freedom, agency and emancipation. In recent years, the veil has become both a potent and unsettling symbol and a rallying-point for discourse and rhetoric concerning women, Islam and the nature of politics.

Early studies in gender, doctrine and politics of veiling appeared in the 1970s following the Islamic revival and ’re-veiling’ trends that were dramatically expressed by 1979’s Iranian Islamic revolution. In the 1990s, research focussed on the development of both an ’Islamic culture industry’ and greater urban middle class consumption of ’Islamic’ garments and dress styles across the Islamic world. In the last decade academics have studied Islamic fashion and marketing, the political role of the headscarf, the veiling of other religious groups such as Jews and Christians, and secular forms of modest dress. Using work from contributors across a range of disciplinary backgrounds and locations, this book brings together these research strands to form the most comprehensive book ever conceived on this topic.

As such, this handbook will be of interest to scholars and students of fashion, gender studies, religious studies, politics and sociology.

chapter 1|26 pages

Introduction

The veil across the globe in politics, everyday life and fashion

part I|67 pages

Politics

chapter 2|16 pages

Neoliberalization and Homo Islameconomicus

The politics of women’s veiling in Turkey 1

chapter 3|9 pages

Discourses of Veiling and the Precarity of Choice

Representations in the post-9/11 US

chapter 5|10 pages

2007/8

The winter of the veiled women in Israel

chapter 6|11 pages

Veiling Narratives

Discourses of Canadian multiculturalism, acceptability and citizenship

chapter 7|10 pages

Veiling and Unveiling in Central Asia

Beliefs and practices, tradition and modernity

part II|43 pages

From politics to fashion

chapter 8|21 pages

Iran’s Compulsory Hijab

From politics and religious authority to fashion shows

chapter 9|9 pages

The Fashions and Politics of Facial Hair in Turkey

The case of Islamic men

chapter 10|12 pages

Representing the Veil in Contemporary Australian Media

From ‘ban the burqa’ to ‘hijabi’ bloggers

part III|58 pages

Fashion and anti-fashion

chapter 11|14 pages

Modest Fashion and Anti-Fashion

chapter 13|11 pages

The ‘Discipline of the Veil’ among Converts to Islam in France and Quebec

Framing gender and expressing femininity

chapter 14|10 pages

Muslim Youth Practising Veiling in Berlin

Modernity, morality and aesthetics

chapter 15|11 pages

Fashioning Selves

Biographic pathways of hijabi women in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

part IV|34 pages

Industries, images, materialities

chapter 17|9 pages

Images of Desire

Creating virtue and value in an Indonesian Islamic lifestyle magazine

chapter 18|7 pages

Smart-Ening Up the Hijab

The materiality of contemporary British Muslim veiling in the physical and the digital

part V|77 pages

Gender, space, community

chapter 19|16 pages

Veiling, Gender And Space

On the fluidity of ‘public’ and ‘private’

chapter 20|9 pages

Hindu And Muslim Veiling In North India

Beyond the public/private dichotomy

chapter 21|12 pages

Hui Women And The Headscarf In China

chapter 22|11 pages

Constructions And Reconstructions Of ‘Appropriate Dress’ In The Diaspora

Young Somali women and sartorial social control in Finland 1

chapter 23|14 pages

Cover Their Face

Masks, masking, and masquerades in historical-anthropological context

chapter 25|5 pages

Veiling Studies And Globalization Studies

The promise of historical sociologies