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Unfair Play: Doha Conference Sheds Light on Biased Images of Muslim Women in Western Media


Posted by faith on 23 Apr 2009 / 0 Comments
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This week in Doha, Qatar, the “East and West — Women in Media’s Eye” conference took place in Education City. The Peninsula and The Gulf Times both had pieces on the event. However, I was hard pressed to find any articles about the conference in any Western based, English language media outlet. Insha’Allah (God willing), […]

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From Bikinis to Hijabs: Using Psychology to Your Advantage


Posted by sobia on 24 Mar 2009 / 0 Comments
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My eyebrows raised when I read this article on IslamOnline. The article, entitled Study: Men Objectify Scantily Clad Women, used a current study conducted by well-known Princeton psychologist, Dr. Susan Fiske, to promote modest clothing. I am familiar with Dr. Fiske’s work, and I couldn’t help but question whether IslamOnline was misrepresenting the study in […]

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The Ideal Egyptian Woman, According to CityStars Mall


Posted by ethar on 19 Mar 2009 / 0 Comments
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For those who don’t know, CityStars mall in Cairo was the biggest mall in the Middle East until it was surpassed by Dubai Mall in November 2008. Nevertheless, it’s still a huge mall, with (according to their website) over 550 stores, 6,000 parking spaces, three hotels, two indoor theme parks, and a 21-screen cinema complex. Over […]

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Assimilation Frustration: a Review of AmericanEast


Posted by fatemeh on 12 Mar 2009 / 0 Comments
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A longer version of this article appears on altmuslimah, while this version appeared at Racialicious. I finally got around to watching AmericanEast this weekend. Full disclosure: I had originally read Tariq Nelson’s review, which was a pretty good rundown. AmericanEast is an attempt at mainstreaming American Muslims and attempts to portray the struggles Muslims face […]

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Sally Quinn Peddles Offensive Stereotypes About Middle-Eastern Women On MSNBC


Posted by fatemeh on 26 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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This was originally written by Megan and published on Jezebel. Sally Quinn just got back from a Brookings Institute conference in Doha and, judging by her appearance on MSNBC talking about the status of women in the Middle East, she didn’t apparently learn much. Quinn peddles so many offensive stereotypes about Middle Eastern countries, the […]

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Foreign bodies as sexual playgrounds


Posted by fatemeh on 25 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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This was written by Cycads and originally appeared on her blog. \So there was this American guy, Jake, who sat with Gareth and me at lunch last Saturday and was telling us how much he wanted to go to Malaysia because it’s apparently a great place to meet women, and claimed that the country is […]

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Rachida Dati’s Rise and Fall


Posted by Krista Riley on 05 Feb 2009 / 0 Comments
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French politician Rachida Dati has been in and out of the headlines since taking office as France’s Minister of Justice.  MMW recently covered the hype around Dati’s pregnancy and her decision to return to work only five days after having a caesarian section.  Now, Dati is back in the news as we hear that she […]

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Three Oppressions in One: Mona Awad’s Lawsuit


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 06 Jan 2009 / 0 Comments
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Dr. Sherene Razack has a theory called Interlocking Systems of Domination, which says that people can be oppressed in different ways and in interlocking and interconnected ways. The various ways in which people are oppressed cannot be detangled from each other and therefore, the oppression that we face must be examined as a whole, as […]

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Sexual harassment of Libyan women is holding us back


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 05 Jan 2009 / 0 Comments
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A recent Reuters article vaguely described sexual harassment in Libya by blaming it on “antiquated male attitudes that decades of gender equality reforms have failed to dislodge.” While it is true that Libyan law sets the foundation for female equality, it was never properly enacted. To say that there have been “decades of gender equality […]

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The media’s surface-level fixation on Libya’s female bodyguards


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 29 Dec 2008 / 0 Comments
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The first thing anyone, male or female, Arab or not ever says to me when they find out I’m Libyan is, “Wow, I’ve never met a Libyan before.” The follow-up question almost always involves a snide comment about Libya’s female bodyguards. These lovely ladies, trained in combat, accompany Colonel Qaddafi, Libya’s head of state, everywhere […]

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