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Introduction: Gender, Islamophobia and the Security Discourse
2016The Introduction begins with an exploration of contemporary debates about Muslims and terrorism in the West. It traces the evolution of Islamophobia as an Orientalist discourse that ‘racializes’ and ‘securitizes’ Muslim communities. From the physical threat of Isis and its members to an ideological battle with Islam and its place in the West, the ...
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Conclusion: Gender, Islamophobia and the Security Discourse—Future Challenges
2016The concluding chapter examines the implications of the discussion in the book for Muslims in Britain and other countries in the West. The conclusion in exploring future challenges highlights the experiences of Muslim communities across Europe and the USA, where similar policies of surveillance and insecurity continue to implicate innocent Muslims. The
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Invisible Violence: Gender, Islamophobia, and the Hidden Assault on U.S. Muslim Women
Women, Gender, and Families of Color, 2017Abstract Drawing on forty semistructured interviews with young Muslim American women, FBI hate crimes data, and civil rights policy reports, this research explores the rise of institutionalized private violence directed at Muslim women. While saving Muslim women from Muslim men through U.S.
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Embodying the Veil: Muslim Women and Gendered Islamophobia in ‘New Times’
2012In this chapter, I explore the intersectional dynamics of race, gender and religion by looking at the relationship between gendered Islamophobic discourses that circulate in the ‘West’ and the embodied identity of professional Muslim women working in universities in Britain.
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Muslim Women and Gender Stereotypes in ‘New Times’: From Multiculturalism to Islamophobia
2013The Arab Spring uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Bahrain and Yemen have exploded the Western stereotypical image of the oppressed Muslim Arab woman. Daily there are images on the news of Muslim women in designer clothes or their long black abayas (Muslim female dress) facing tear gas and baton-wielding troops, or risking sexual assault and ...
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Viewing Islamophobia through the Socially Constructed Power Relations of Race, Gender, and Class
2016This chapter will examine the phenomenon of Islamophobia through the social relations of race, gender, and class. As the first half of the previous chapter set out to define what Islamophobia is, this chapter will spell out why and how Islamophobia emerges in the post-9/11 context from a critical race perspective.
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Gendered Islamophobia: The nature of Hindu and Buddhist nationalism in India and Sri Lanka
Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 2021Andrea Malji
exaly

