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THE VEIL
The Lifted Veil: MMW Reviews The Veil Anthology Jennifer Heath published The Scimitar and the Veil: Extraordinary Women of Islam in 2004. And I loved it. It profiled strong, intelligent women in Islams history, including the women of the Prophets life, but also Hadith scholars, poets, warriors, etc. It was a quick read despite the thickness of the book because Heath made these women into great stories without stripping them of their humanity. So when I read that Heath edited and wrote for The Veil: Women Writers on Its History, Lore, and Politics (published in 2008), I was really excited.
The book is separated into three sections, which arent officially themed. The first section concentrates on the religious use and history of the veil in different contexts. Mohja Kahf writes an interesting essay about forced unveilings in the Middle East (something that doesnt ever make it to the evening news). Pamela K. Taylor writes an excellent essay about the politics imbued with the scarf she wears, and how she navigates through the positive and negative aspects of these associations. Section two deals with the veils relationship to the physical realm. In this section, Shireen Malik details a history of Salome and her veils. One of my favorite pieces, Drawing the Line at Modesty My Place in the Order of Things, by Michelle Auerbach, talks about her yearning for an idyllic version of a Jewish lifestyle, complete with family gatherings and dinners, but her struggle with the modesty requirements of the sect of Judaism she was practicing. I found this personally resonant as a Muslim woman who loves the idea of community, but finds herself at odds with the seeming rigidity of what is modest and what isnt. The third section focuses on sociopolitics and the veil, following histories of the veil in different countries and political environments. Aisha Lee Fox Shaheed asks the question How Islamic is the veil? in her essay Dress Codes and Modes, while Dinah Zeiger traces the Orientalism and privilege inherent in National Geographics search for the (heretofore) nameless Afghan girl, now a woman with children, featured on the 1985 cover of the magazine. The books inclusion of Hinduism, Judaism, and Christianity alongside Islam is one of its best features. So often, veils are ascribed to Islam and Islam only, ignoring the extensive pre-Islamic existences of this piece of cloth. This inclusion also has the (perhaps intentional) effect of interfaith communication and alliance-building: reading about the different reasons, histories, and levels of veiling in other religions makes women of these faiths seem less different than we are taught. Heath doesnt aim to give a concrete definition of what veiling is. The book gives several different (and differing) perspectives on what veiling is to the women within these pages, and lets the reader mull over what this may mean herself. In a politically-charged atmosphere, where most books, speakers, and articles aim to define and control the veil and its meanings, The Veil is a refreshing anti-viewpoint. Full disclosure: MMWs editor, Fatemeh, interviewed the editor of this book, Jennifer Heath, for the upcoming issue of Bitch magazine.
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