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American Occidentalism and the agential Muslim woman

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 December 2012

Abstract

Through the War on Terror the United States developed a seemingly enlightened understanding of Muslim women. In contrast to Orientalised representations of Muslim women's passivity and victimisation within brutal Islamic cultures these emerging representations posit Muslim women in terms of their modernity and liberation. The emergence of this new Muslim woman illuminates an attempt to secure an Occidental self through the negotiation of conflicting impulses towards Islam. Islam is recognised as the repository from which the US enemy other emerges yet the WoT also reflects a particular desire for a cosmopolitan inclusivity. The presence of the Muslim woman acts to assuage these tensions. Her oppression confirms the barbarity of the enemy yet the combination of her intrinsic agency and religiosity posits her as an acceptable Islamic other whose presence confirms the pluralistic tolerance of the US and the universal validity of its project.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2012 

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References

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38 Ibid., pp. 3–4.

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41 Ibid.

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45 The accuracy of these figures is questionable. The Soviet backed regime are thought to have exaggerated women's employment participation for propaganda purposes and the statistics do not reflect the fact that many men were absent due to participation in ongoing conflict.

46 Powell, Remarks, emphasis added.

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50 The veil as an issue of political debate and sometimes legislation has resurfaced within a number of European and Middle Eastern countries including the Netherlands, France, the UK, Syria, and Turkey.

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53 A web based version of this exhibition may be found at: {http://www.usaid.gov/missions/shadows/}.

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77 Said, Orientalism, p. 7.

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