The veil : women writers on its history, lore, and politics /

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Heath, Jennifer
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Berkeley : University of California Press, [2008]
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction / Jennifer Heath
  • From her royal body the robe was removed : the blessings of the veil and the trauma of forced unveilings in the Middle East / Mohja Kahf
  • Shattered vessels that contain sparks of the divine : unveiling Hasidic women's dress code / Barbara Goldman Carrel
  • Going the whole nine yards : vignettes of the veil in India / Roxanne Kamayani Gupta
  • Out of the cloister : unveiling to better serve the Gospel / Laurene M. Lafontaine
  • The Amish veil : symbol of separation and community / Jana M. Hawley
  • "What is subordinated, dominates" : mourning, magic, masks, and male veiling / Jennifer Heath
  • I just want to be me : issues in identity for one American Muslim woman / Pamela K. Taylor
  • "She freed and floated on the air" : Salome and her dance of the seven veils / Shireen Malik
  • "He hath couerd my soule inwarde and myn heed with a veyle" : veiling in medieval Europe and the early church / Désirée G. Koslin
  • Nubo : the wedding veil / Sarah C. Bell
  • After Eden : the veil as a conduit to the internal / Eve Grubin
  • Virtue and sin : an Arab Christian woman's perspective / Rita Stephan
  • Drawing the line at modesty : my place in the order of things / Michelle Auerbach
  • On the road : travels with my hijab / Maliha Masood
  • Purdah, patriarchy, and the tropical sun : womanhood in India / Jasbir Jain
  • The veil : from Persepolis / Marjane Satrapi
  • Concealing and revealing female hair : veiling dynamics in contemporary Iran / Ashraf Zahedi
  • That (Afghan) girl! : ideology unveiled in National geographic / Dinah Zeiger
  • Burqas and bikinis : Islamic dress in newspaper cartoons / Kecia Ali
  • Dress codes and modes : how Islamic is the veil? / Aisha Lee Fox Shaheed
  • From veil to veil : "what's in a woman's head is a lot more important than what's on it" / Sherifa Zuhur
  • Epilogue.