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'People Think Our Lives Are Dark.' Diasporic Resistance to the Metaphoric Darkening of Female Muslim Identity

chapter
posted on 2024-10-30, 21:37 authored by Chloe PattonChloe Patton
This chapter explores the role metaphoric enlightenment plays in representations of the identity of young Australian Muslim women that circulate in the public sphere. It examines how metaphors of enlightenment, understood here as the transformation from a negative, 'dark' female subjective state to a positive way of being associated with 'light' are scripted into the representation of female Muslim identity. This is achieved through focusing on how Muslim women chose to represent themselves, asking them to create and comment upon photographic self-portraits that expressed their own sense of self. Young Muslim women's use of the enlightenment metaphor to represent their identity can be read as a conscious struggle to usurp the Imperialist variant of the metaphor present within Islamophobic representations of female Muslim identity.

History

Start page

61

End page

73

Total pages

13

Outlet

Political and Cultural Representations of Muslims

Editors

Christopher Flood, Stephen Hutchings, Galina Miazhevich, Henri Nickels

Publisher

Brill

Place published

Leiden, The Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2012 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands

Former Identifier

2006069646

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-01-18