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J’adore Chador: Majida Khattari’s Art


Posted by nicole on 05 May 2010 / 0 Comments
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Le Monde, France 24 and Le Nouvel Observateur covered Franco-Moroccan artist Majida Khattari’s Parisian runway show/art exhibit in April. Her show was titled “VIP” (for Voile islamique parisien) and took place at Paris’ Cité Universitaire. The show was atypical of Parisian shows in its choice of subject: a series of veils. Her choice of subject isn’t by accident. […]

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Bérengère Lefranc’s “Un voile, Un certain moi de juin”


Posted by nicole on 15 Mar 2010 / 0 Comments
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Un voile, Un certain moi de juin is the story of French artist Bérengère Lefranc’s decision to wear a “burqa” (although she hesitates to define it as such) for one month and write about it.  I was skeptical about this book after reading an initial review of it in Swiss daily Le Temps. Not normally […]

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The Headscarf as Cultural Barometer: Emma Tarlo’s Book on Hijab


Posted by sarayasin on 08 Feb 2010 / 0 Comments
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In her new book, entitled Visibly Muslim: Fashion, Politics, Faith, Emma Tarlo captures the diversity in the way that Islam is practiced against the backdrop of multi-cultural Britain. Refreshingly, the book did not aim to answer whether or not covering was a part of Islam, and neither did it represent the views of Muslim women […]

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The Science of Beating a Dead Horse: The Christian Science Monitor’s Hijab Series


Posted by sarayasin on 17 Dec 2009 / 0 Comments
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Recently, The Christian Science Monitor published a series of articles centered around the hijab. While I appreciated the valiant effort to offer some insight into the discourse around the hijab and the lives of Muslim women, it ultimately left me frustrated. The articles treat the headscarf as the heart of women’s issues in Islam. Centering […]

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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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What’s Love Got to Do With It? Amours Voilees’ Representations of Love and the Veil


Posted by ethar on 05 Mar 2009 / 0 Comments
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There’s a new Moroccan movie out that, on the surface, seems to tackle the issue of pre-marital sex in the country. They’re a dime a dozen these days, but this one is stirring up controversy like crazy. Why? I’ll give you a hint: The name of the movie is Amours Voilées,  Hijab al-hob, which translates […]

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Princess Hijab


Posted by muslimahmediawatch on 11 Dec 2008 / 0 Comments
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I admit, the title put me off a little. Princess Hijab? But when I looked through her flicker albums, I was blown away. Princess Hijab is an anonymous 20-year-old guerilla street artist based in Paris, who began her “noble cause” of “hijab-ising” advertisements in 2006. She does this by using spray paint and a black […]

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