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Art of Words: Women Calligraphers Then and Now


Posted by tasnim on 06 Feb 2012 / 0 Comments
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A few days ago, Lubna Shaikh posted this calligraphic collage craft idea for children on Suhaibwebb.com, in honor of the remembrance of the birth of the Prophet. Lubna writes that there is a need to “seek creative ways of imparting the knowledge of our deen” to children, to help them cultivate a personal connection with […]

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Zarina Hashmi: Mapping Home


Posted by tasnim on 31 Jan 2012 / 0 Comments
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Susan Friedman has described the homonym roots/routes as “two sides of the same coin: roots, signifying identity based on stable cores and continuities; routes, suggesting identity based on travel, change and disruption.” I have always visualized veteran artist Zarina Hashmi’s home on wheels as embodying this duality. Like much of her work, her piece entitled […]

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“A Country and a Continent”: Fatimah Tuggar and the Politics of Montage


Posted by tasnim on 17 Jan 2012 / 0 Comments
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Fatimah Tuggar is one of the artists Jiwa has discussed, in his article on Imaging, imagining and representation: Muslim visual artists in NYC. As  Munir Jiwa has pointed out, the past couple of decades have seen “the larger tropes of Islam/Muslims—terrorism, violence, veiling, patriarchy, the Middle East—become the normative frames and images within and against which Muslim artists […]

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Revisiting Miriam Cooke’s “Muslimwoman”


Posted by tasnim on 11 Jan 2012 / 0 Comments
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Miriam Cooke has described her use of “Muslimwoman” in one word as a reference to embracing and performing a singular gendered and religious identity, a way of reflecting the intertwining of gender and religion and describing this erasure of diversity. In 2008, in her essay on deploying this term, Cooke explained: The neologism Muslimwoman draws […]

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Had You Been A Muslim: Joumana Haddad and the Liberated Arab Woman


Posted by tasnim on 02 Jan 2012 / 0 Comments
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When Lebanese writer and poet Joumana Haddad’s I Killed Scheherazade: Confessions of An Angry Arab Woman was published in 2010, it was described as a bold treatise, intentionally designed to be revolutionary, written in manifesto style. Recently, a revived interest has situated it in more superficial terms as “a provocative new book which “lifts the veil” […]

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Robin Wright’s Rock the Casbah: Pink Hijabi, Counter Jihadi


Posted by tasnim on 15 Dec 2011 / 0 Comments
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Robin Wright’s Rock the Casbah Rage and Rebellion Across the Islamic World describes what Wright calls “the counter-jihad, which is unfolding in the wider Islamic bloc of fifty-seven countries as well as among Muslim minorities worldwide.” A decade after 9/11, Wright argues that “the Islamic world is now in the throes of a counterjihad” which […]

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Nadia Jebril and the Eurabia Cassandras


Posted by tasnim on 08 Dec 2011 / 0 Comments
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Nadia Jebril was once known as “that Muslim girl with the Skåne accent.”   With her new show Rena Rama Arabiskan (“Pure Arabic”) Jebril has both moved beyond that simplistic label and inadvertently added to the clamor and the clangor of the bells of doom tolled by Eurabia cassandras in Sweden. Like comedian (and now TV and radio show […]

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The “Symbolic Step” of Women’s Political Participation in A New Libya


Posted by tasnim on 28 Nov 2011 / 0 Comments
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Libya’s new interim government, which was announced on November 22, has been tasked with preparing for elections scheduled for next June, when voters will select an assembly to write the new constitution. As expected, given the challenges of rebuilding the country after four decades of dictatorship and nine months of war, the choice of ministers […]

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Muslim Women In The Eye of the Camera


Posted by tasnim on 16 Nov 2011 / 0 Comments
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In a short interview in The New Yorker this past September, American photographer Lynsey Addario, who has covered the Middle East and South Asia for over a decade, talks about her experience photographing Muslim women: “The more I photographed Muslim women, the more I was able to metaphorically strip away the burqas and hijabs, and […]

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Self-Conscious Orientalism in Craig Thompson’s Graphic Novel Habibi


Posted by tasnim on 02 Nov 2011 / 0 Comments
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Editor’s note: A longer version of this post is available on Tasnim’s personal blog. Craig Thompson’s graphic novel Habibi took 7 years to complete and is close to 700 pages. The result is described on the book’s website as “a parable about our relationship to the natural world, the cultural divide between the first and […]

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