Analysing the position of female Muslims in patriarchal society and their choice of donning hijab amidst socio-political context.

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2446-5240.malala.2020.155901

Palabras clave:

Hijab, Islam, Emancipation, Muslim Male-Female Dynamics in Patriarchal Society, Socio-Political ideologies

Resumen

Discourse on Muslim women’s oppression in the context of Muslim and non-Muslim countries discuss on various media and academic debates. These discussions heavily focus on their position in Islamic society, their interpretation within feminism, and larger discussions regarding donning Hijab and Islamophobia. Primarily, the adaptation of Hijab as a garment most of the time refers from religious to social pressure and relates to political ideologies. This article combines the stories and facts beyond those narratives finding identities which are entirely personal when it comes to donning the hijab. This analysis base on the theories ‘Orientalism’, ‘Male gaze’ and books such as Mohanty’s Under Western Eyes,  The Headscarf Controversies by Hilal Elver, Beyond the Veil by Fatema Mernissi, Islam vs Islamism by Peter R Demant, etc and the primary discussion with five students from different Muslim countries living in the UK. Through those discussions, tradition and ethnicity appear as having a significant influence on religious practices. However, factors such as one’s cultural context or geographical location were also discussed as relevant to their decision. This article explores the fact the donning of Hijab or covering oneself should be a woman's personal choice and right and lately, how it becomes a communicative gesture in a public space. Through comparative studies on the adaptation of Hijab in Patriarchal society it explains Muslim woman’s subjectivity towards hijab is not away from political connotations.

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Biografía del autor/a

  • Syeda Sadia Mehjabin, University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh

    Syeda Sadia Mehjabin is a part-time faculty of Internal Communication at University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh. Also, the Executive Advisor of Dhaka International Mobile Film Festival runs under Media Studies and Journalism department. She has been working with the electronic and print media for over ten years and as an ethnographic researcher observed the gradual shift of society from electronic to digital. While working for a News Channel, she has realised how media plays a crucial role in moulding our thinking capacity, and through semiotics creates an impact on perceptions. Recently, she has completed her second postgraduate from Coventry University with Course Tutor’s Prize, and currently working on her PhD topic. Her research interests include Orientalism, Hijab, Islam, Patriarchal Society, Ethnographic research, Emancipation, Socio-Political ideologies, Muslim feminism, particularly in topics such as psychoanalysis, forth look, dispositions, power, and control. Her research subject in the theory of critical thinking, developing communication through creative media, knowledge and culture. ORCID ID https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0609-9633 Email: runia.syedasadia@gmail.com.

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Publicado

2020-12-23

Cómo citar

Mehjabin, S. S. (2020). Analysing the position of female Muslims in patriarchal society and their choice of donning hijab amidst socio-political context. Malala, Revista Internacional De Estudos Sobre O Oriente Médio E Mundo Muçulmano, 8(11), 51-69. https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2446-5240.malala.2020.155901