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Do Muslim Feminists Have Too Much to Worry About Already to Think About Homophobia?


Posted by alicia on 02 Dec 2009 / 0 Comments
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This was originally published at Cycads. Once a week, I meet with people studying gender in the Middle East and we talk about the assigned articles we’ve read during the week. Last week, it was about sexuality and homophobia. Emerging from our discussion on LGBT rights in the Middle East (particularly in Lebanon and Palestine) […]

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Marketing Muslim Lifestyles and Rethinking Modesty


Posted by alicia on 16 Nov 2009 / 0 Comments
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If a hijab in Pucci-designed print could speak, what would it say? I attended a seminar presented by Professor Reina Lewis on Muslim women’s lifestyle magazines last night and was faced with this bizarre question. It all started with the actual seminar itself, which showcased the latest research adventures of the fashion and design professor. […]

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Whose Revolution? Critiquing Seyran Ates and her Islamic Sexual Revolution


Posted by alicia on 21 Oct 2009 / 0 Comments
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The calls of lawyer, activist, and writer Seyran Ates for a sexual revolution in the heterogeneous Muslim world may surprise many, particularly when the movement is commonly associated with free love, hippies, and public nudity. In a recent interview with German magazine Spiegel, Ates begins with discussing what she means by this and her experiences […]

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Questioning the Veil, Questioning the Questioner


Posted by alicia on 12 Oct 2009 / 0 Comments
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Today we witness postcolonial Orientalism coming to grips with its obsession with the hijab. While the white French elite seem fixed on debating its symbols, the British media are asking why women choose to wear it. Once, the obsession was an obvious desire to unveil Muslim women (think postcards of semi-naked North African women during […]

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Big Love: Appropriating Feminism in Advocating Polygamy


Posted by alicia on 30 Sep 2009 / 0 Comments
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Stories about polygamy tend to surge and ebb in the media, but they never fail to intrigue people. Recently in South Africa, a Zulu man married four women–all at once–making the most popular story on the BBC news website (you can watch the clip here). In the video, a male wedding guest gives a thumbs-up […]

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Ramadhan Book Club: Our Stories, Our Lives


Posted by alicia on 15 Sep 2009 / 0 Comments
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Our Stories, Our Lives is an anthology of a diverse group of women in Bradford, England, offering a glimpse into their lives and their issues with reconciling their Muslim identities with being British. With the media’s daily onslaught on the image of Muslims and assumptions about so-called conflicting alliances (Islam and the West), a “proud […]

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Seksualiti Merdeka: Coming to Terms With the Love that Dares not Speak its Name


Posted by alicia on 31 Aug 2009 / 0 Comments
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Who would have thought that sexuality rights were being celebrated in the historical and cultural heart of the Malaysian capital two weeks ago? Malaysia, like anywhere else (Muslim-majority or not) has long suffered from homophobia and transphobia in the most public of places: unsubstantiated accusations of homosexual behaviour landed one of the most influential politicians […]

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Burqas and the British Police Farce


Posted by alicia on 04 Aug 2009 / 0 Comments
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Oh, this is just hilarious. Three female police officers were ordered to dress up as Muslim women for the day just to see what it felt like. They wore traditional burkhas as part of a scheme designed to help police interact better with the Islamic community. It’s like going to a fancy dress party, because, […]

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The Mother of All Sins: Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno’S Caning


Posted by alicia on 29 Jul 2009 / 0 Comments
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They say that money is the root of all evil. At times, I couldn’t agree more. But now I hear that alcohol consumption is the “mother of all sins”. I’m not going into detail about which sins are worse, but more on the earthly consequences of such sins as defined by the male religious elite. […]

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No Country for Muslim Women


Posted by alicia on 16 Jun 2009 / 0 Comments
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I am not an Islamic scholar, therefore my opinions on Islam do not count. Worse still,  I’m told that it’s not my place to have an opinion on Islam at all. This is the general climate of thought in Malaysia put forth in the recent proposal by the country’s main Islamic party, PAS, to investigate […]

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