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NPR gives us an Orientalist romance


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 22 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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When I started to read a recent NPR story about an Iraqi woman married to an American sergeant, I had to double check to make sure that I was actually reading a news story and not a piece of Orientalist fiction. “From The Iraq War, A Troubled Romance In America” is filled with so many […]

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No Headscarf, No Entry: Golshifteh Farahani’s Dilemma


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 21 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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MMW‘s Friday Links last week had within it three links about Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani (below), who has appeared in the recent Hollywood film Body of Lies. Apparently, from the news reports, it seems that Farahani has created quite a stir within Iran, or as the LA Times reported some “Middle East-style intrigue”. Middle East-style […]

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Looking at Sarah from Little Mosque


Posted by Krista Riley on 20 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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The third season of Little Mosque on the Prairie has just started up, so I figured it was time to have a discussion about it. Actually, I’ll be honest and admit that really, the reason I’m talking about it is that I wrote a paper on it for a class on popular culture last week, […]

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Friday Links — October 17, 2008


Posted by fatemeh on 17 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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Al Ahram Weekly looks at the sexual assaults during Eid in Egypt. Two suspects are being tried currently. The BBC interviews a female suicide bombers in Gaza. Via Arabisto. The Herald writes more about the history of women in suicide bombing. More Indonesians against the anti-pornography bill. On November 24-25, the Second Ministerial Meeting on […]

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There’s Something About Aishah


Posted by Guest Contributor on 16 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by Marwa El Naggar and previously published at alt.muslim and IslamOnline. There’s something not quite right about seeing a citation for One Thousand and One Nights in a bibliography for a novel about the Lady Aishah, Prophet Muhammad’s famous wife. What it says about an author who would, in writing about […]

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Miss Undastood


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 15 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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A few months ago, my mother gave me the CD of a Muslimah who she saw rapping at a masjid in Philadelphia. The CD is titled Muslimas with Attitude and the artist is Miss Undastood (link to her MySpace page here). She’s still a relatively new rapper who has released a few mixed-track CDs. Listening […]

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The Maple Effect: Sarah Maple’s Art


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 14 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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I’ve always loved viewing art, especially at museums, though I’ve never considered myself savvy enough to ‘get it,’ always resorting to a laywoman’s interpretation. However, I’ve learned that regardless of what the artist intended in his/her piece, the observer/viewer/art connoisseur will see what s/he wants. Therefore, art can be a very controversial arena for expressing […]

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Who’s Your Daddy?: Media Images of Yasmin Fostok


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 13 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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Muslimah Media Watch thanks Ali Eteraz for the tip! A few weeks ago, several Western outlets featured an exposé on Yasmin Fostok (pictured below), the daughter of infamous cleric Omar Bakri Mohammed. And when I say exposé, I’m not kidding: the majority of outlets that ran the story ran it with accompanying pictures of her […]

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Friday Links — October 10, 2008


Posted by fatemeh on 10 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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A female fan jumps onstage and kisses Tamer Hosni during a concert in Kuwait, shutting down the concert early and outraging Kuwaiti parliament members. Eid celebrations in a Cairo suburb were marred after several women were sexually assaulted. A woman and her husband are harassed by three members of the Saudi Commission for the Promotion […]

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How to make a killing in veiled cliches


Posted by Guest Contributor on 09 Oct 2008 / 0 Comments
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This was written by Amal Awad and originally published in The Sydney Morning Herald. As I spot one veiled cliche after another in the bookshop, I realise that when it comes to Muslims in print, if kidnapped children and enslavement were the flavour of the ’80s and ’90s, honour killings are the leitmotif of the […]

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