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oapen-20.500.12657-613902024-03-27T14:14:30Z Chapter 34 Affective Witnessing of the Hijab Abdel-Fadil, Mona hijab, trauma thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JB Society and culture: general::JBS Social groups, communities and identities::JBSF Gender studies, gender groups The hijab has triggered affects for centuries. It has sparked narratives of “saving” Muslim women from the shackles of Muslim men and Islam. In recent years, we have seen several examples of individuals and collectives who experience the mere sighting of the hijab as intolerable. Here, I take a closer look at the affects of “awayness” that move through the hijab in contemporary Western contexts, and how these affects are performed, heightened, and intensified online. Drawing on a decolonial approach to affect and extensive ethnographic research, I argue that collectives who are deeply immersed in the heightened and intensified affective engagement against the hijab, spell out their own symbolic death. By continuously affectively witnessing the hijab, and triggering affects such as despair, anger, outrage, sorrow, and grief, it becomes a self-inflicted trauma, perceived as unbearable. Thus, affective witnessing shifts the focus from ascribed-victimization of Muslim women to self-victimization. And, the affective witnesses of hijab emerge as the “true victims” of hijab. 2023-02-22T11:11:27Z 2023-02-22T11:11:27Z 2023 chapter 9780367492014 9781032350844 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/61390 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf Taylor & Francis The Routledge Companion to Gender and Affect Routledge 10.4324/9781003045007-39 10.4324/9781003045007-39 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 02a2d8ca-5d6b-43da-b42a-67cb63a722ad 178e65b9-dd53-4922-b85c-0aaa74fce079 9780367492014 9781032350844 European Research Council (ERC) Routledge 9 H2020 European Research Council H2020 Excellent Science - European Research Council open access
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English
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The hijab has triggered affects for centuries. It has sparked narratives of “saving” Muslim women from the shackles of Muslim men and Islam. In recent years, we have seen several examples of individuals and collectives who experience the mere sighting of the hijab as intolerable. Here, I take a closer look at the affects of “awayness” that move through the hijab in contemporary Western contexts, and how these affects are performed, heightened, and intensified online. Drawing on a decolonial approach to affect and extensive ethnographic research, I argue that collectives who are deeply immersed in the heightened and intensified affective engagement against the hijab, spell out their own symbolic death. By continuously affectively witnessing the hijab, and triggering affects such as despair, anger, outrage, sorrow, and grief, it becomes a self-inflicted trauma, perceived as unbearable. Thus, affective witnessing shifts the focus from ascribed-victimization of Muslim women to self-victimization. And, the affective witnesses of hijab emerge as the “true victims” of hijab.
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9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf
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spellingShingle |
9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf
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title_short |
9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf
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title_full |
9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf
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title_fullStr |
9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf
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title_full_unstemmed |
9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf
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9781003045007_10.4324_9781003045007-39.pdf
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publisher |
Taylor & Francis
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publishDate |
2023
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1799945237297102848
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