Religiosity and modesty: how veiled Muslim women in the United States define modest activewear

Author(s):  
Chanmi Hwang ◽  
Tae Ho Kim
Author(s):  
Sylvia Chan-Malik

Being U.S. Muslims: A Cultural History of Women of Color and American Islam offers a previously untold story of Islam in the United States that foregrounds the voices, experiences, and images of women of color in the United States from the early twentieth century to the present. Until the late 1960s, the majority of Muslim women in the U.S.—as well as almost all U.S. Muslim women who appeared in the American press or popular culture, were African American. Thus, the book contends that the lives and labors of African American Muslim women have—and continue to—forcefully shaped the meanings and presence of American Islam, and are critical to approaching issues confronting Muslim women in the contemporary U.S. At the heart of U.S. Muslim women’s encounters with Islam, the volume demonstrates, is a desire for gender justice that is rooted in how issues of race and religion have shaped women’s daily lives. Women of color’s ways of “being U.S. Muslims” have been consistently forged against commonsense notions of racial, gendered, and religious belonging and citizenship. From narratives of African American women who engage Islam as a form of social protest, through intersections of “Islam” and “feminism” in the media, and into contemporary expressions of racial and gender justice in U.S. Muslim communities, Being U.S. Muslims demonstrates that it is this continual againstness— which the book names affective insurgency—that is the central hall marks of U.S. Muslim women’s lives.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zayn Cheema

Given the complexities of identity for Muslim women in the United States, they are frequently negatively impacted in workplace settings. This study’s purpose was to examine how intersectional aspects of identity were correlated with the experiences of Muslim women in workplace settings in Anchorage, Alaska. The study utilized a quantitative correlational research method, which involved the usage of an index-driven survey which consisted of data derived from demographic studies, the MacArthur Subjective Social Status Scale, the Workplace Prejudice/Discrimination Inventory and the Workplace Satisfaction/Stress Scale. The study found that ethnicity and workplace discrimination were strongly correlated, while other correlations were not found to be statistically significant. Based on the gaps in knowledge in the current body of research, these findings could support a greater investment in research regarding minority populations in rural and conservative areas in the United States.   


Author(s):  
Naïma Hachad

Chapter 4 offers analyses of several images from Lalla Essaydi’s photographic series Converging Territories (2004), Les Femmes du Maroc (2006-2008), and Harem (2009), in which she exclusively depicts women from Morocco or the Moroccan diaspora. The chapter focuses on the feminist transnational discourse that emerges from Essaydi’s inscription of her biography—more specifically her experience growing up in a harem and living as an adult woman in Saudi Arabia and the United States—and her training in Western art. The chapter is structured around a set of key questions. Does Essaydi’s juxtaposition of Orientalist tropes and poses from canonical nineteenth-century European Orientalist paintings with the veil, calligraphy, henna tattoos, and Moroccan architecture disrupt or reinforce stereotypes in the depiction of Arab and Muslim women? Can Essaydi’s hybrid language be read as a form of feminist ‘double critique’ that resists Western and Islamic patriarchy? How do Essaydi’s images intervene in relation to the transnational and transcultural discourse and positioning of the ‘Muslimwoman’? What is the economy between the transnational, transglobal and translocal, and the simply local in Essaydi’s images? How do Essaydi’s photographs contribute to the critical (re)thinking of gender in the context of globalization?


Health Equity ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 264-271 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henna Budhwani ◽  
Seth Borgstede ◽  
Aarin L. Palomares ◽  
Roman B. Johnson ◽  
Kristine R. Hearld

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