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Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance (Dress, Body, Culture)
 
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Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance (Dress, Body, Culture) [Paperback]

Fadwa El Guindi (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Book Description

1859739296 978-1859739297 September 1, 2003 First Edition
Shortlisted for the Katharine Briggs Folklore Award 2000.

In the 1970s, often to the consternation of parents and siblings, certain progressive young Arab women voluntarily donned the veil. The movement, which rapidly expanded and continues to gather momentum, has sparked controversy within Islamic culture, as well as reactions ranging from perplexity to outrage from those outside it. Western feminist commentators have been particularly vociferous in decrying the veil, which they glibly interpret as a concrete manifestation of patriarchal oppression.

However, most Western observers fail to realize that veiling, which has a long and complex history, has been embraced by many Arab women as both an affirmation of cultural identity and a strident feminist statement. Not only does the veil de-marginalize women in society, but it also represents an expression of liberation from colonial legacies. In short, contemporary veiling is more often than not about resistance. By voluntarily removing themselves from the male gaze, these women assert their allegiance to a rich and varied tradition, and at the same time preserve their sexual identity. Beyond this, however, the veil also communicates exclusivity of rank and nuances in social status and social relations that provide telling insights into how Arab culture is constituted. Further, as the author clearly demonstrates, veiling is intimately connected with notions of the self, the body and community, as well as with the cultural construction of identity, privacy and space.

This provocative book draws on extensive original fieldwork, anthropology, history and original Islamic sources to challenge the simplistic assumption that veiling is largely about modesty and seclusion, honor and shame.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Her work considerably expands understanding of the complexities of veiling traditions over time and space." --Choice

"Much textual and field research has gone into El Guindi's exploration, and many will find her conclusions persuasive, disputed though they are." --Saudi Aramco World

"This is clearly a book that will be of value for years." --Yemen Update

"El-Guindi's book presents the first systematic and in-depth gendered analysis of the veil." --Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute

"Veil is the most comprehensive and interesting study to date that explores a misunderstood subject involving the lives of more than one billion persons. . . . It should be required reading for those studying the Middle East, Islam, dress, gender, political resistance, and anthropology." --American Anthropologist

"Veil is an engrossing, scholarly, and comprehensive analysis of the veil in its many social, historical and political contexts." --Barbara C. Aswad, Wayne State University

"A stimulating and informative analysis of a key aspect of a significant cultural practice." --The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology

About the Author

Fadwa El Guindi is at the University of Southern California.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Berg Publishers; First Edition edition (September 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1859739296
  • ISBN-13: 978-1859739297
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #509,142 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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37 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sailing through history to present veil with vision., November 10, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance (Dress, Body, Culture) (Paperback)
The author has done such a great job, challenging the stereotypical western view to the meaning of veiling in a thorough scientific research, using an anthropological analysis and sailing through the history; east and west. She succeeded in disentangling the confusions that exist between cultural language as far as veil is concerned. In a serious and great effort, her analysis illustrate the layers and layes of meanings that are mixed with veiling in the past and present, in Muslim and non-Muslim countries. I am glad that there an anthropologist in the international community who can introduce a picture of the Islamic culture that is different from what has become known through Mernessi and Sa'adawi. We still need to do more in two directions, clarifying the misunderstanding to the western mind through more research in the direction that she has taken, and self criticizing the limitations of the current mind structure of the so called Muslims. As far as I can see as an anthropologist who lives in Egypt, the Egyptian Islam is endangered by the petrodollars Islam. Preserving the Egyptian identity is a great target to which social sciences in general and anthropology in particular should direct their efforts. Islam as digested and introduced by the Egyptians is the international Islam. The one that is tolerant, unbiased, humane and open. That is the Islam we need in order to establish a real cultural debate in the next millennium and not to go into cultural conflicts as Huntington has expected.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars UNCOVERING THE MYSTIQUE OF THE VEIL, April 20, 2006
This review is from: Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance (Dress, Body, Culture) (Paperback)
In this extensively researched book, Fadwa El Guindi offers new insight into Middle Eastern women's decision to adopt modest Muslim attire since the 1970s.

The author presents historical and anthropological documentation of the phenomena of covering up -- which she explains is not solely practiced by women.

The reader gains a perspective of how the veil has been used from prehistory as a form of privacy, protection and class status. El Guindi stresses there is no fast rule on who wears or does not wear the veil. She also rejects radical Western feminists' claims that the veil degrades women. Rather, she stresses, the veil is a woman's silent defiance against imported Western culture and colonialism as in Algeria and Palestine and unpopular regimes in much of the Arab world.
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16 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Veil: A Study of Arabic Linguistics rather than Traditional Head Coverings, November 2, 2006
This review is from: Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance (Dress, Body, Culture) (Paperback)
Fadwa El Guindi's work on the practice of veiling in Islam seems more like an in depth study of Arabic etymology than a comprehensive overview of the practice of veiling. El Guindi's book promises to chronicle the use of the veil while simultaneously dispelling "Western" myths about the practice of and ideology behind veiling. Unfortunately, her work relies too heavily on citations and becomes bogged down in trying to refute all other scholarly theories about veiling; her message gets lost somewhere between the tenth and twentieth assertion that past ethnographic studies of Islamic women and veiling are Euro- and ethnocentric. Although her idea of studying purely the practice of veiling by means of an ethnographic as well as textual approach has a great deal of merit in its own right, the implementation is poor and the actual writing poorer.

Guindi's overreaching purpose is twofold: to dispel the common, "Westernized" myths put forth by trained anthropologists, and to use a textual and ethnography-based approach to understand more holistically the practice, implications, and purposes of veiling in modern, early Islamic, and, to some extent, pre-Islamic times. Her premise is that all previous studies of the veil have been about women and not the veil per se, and her argument is that the veil is actually a source of power and in some cases a legitimization of partial female autonomy rather than one of seclusion and male-enforced oppression.

The first section of the book deals primarily with Guindi's claim that Women's and Islamic Studies scholars are ethnocentric in their interpretation of veiling which Guindi attempts to support by exhaustively citing works on the subject of veiling and haram. She then proceeds to explain why nearly all of these scholarly theories are incomplete, biased, or both. Though Chapter 2 touches on the historical and pre-Islamic roots of veiling, the first 45 pages of Veil are dominated by a theory-heavy argument about bias. It is here that Guindi presents her method of studying the veil which she believes to be a more holistic, culturally and historically-minded approach. In a fresh, novel way, Guindi argues that anthropologists must consult textual sources as well as historical and ethnographic data in order to understand cultural issues, especially those that garner a great deal of emotional fervor, such as the practice of veiling. As such, the first quarter of the book is more a work of anthropological theory than a study or history of veiling practices.
Guindi attempts to resolve this lack of actual discussion about the veil in Section 2. The primary basis for her argument in this section is the implicit premise that if a society has not created a word for a certain idea, then the idea does not, in fact, exist within the culture. A prime example of this is the concept of "privacy," or at least some sort of Westernized notion of "privacy." Guindi argues that since there is no actual Arabic term for the concept of "privacy," then it must necessarily not exist within Arabic culture. This form of argument is the most prevalent throughout Section 2, and leads one to believe that one is reading a piece on Arabic etymology rather than a treatise on women's dress in Islamic culture.

However, Guindi does provide an interesting, though long-winded, history of the anthropological notion of dress, which gives illumination to the position from which she writes. It would seem natural that Guindi, having finally made clear her holistic approach to anthropology and having given a brief history of the anthropology of dress, would then proceed to the practice of veiling, which seems to be the subject of her book. Instead, one finds an entire chapter on the etymology of the Arabic root h-r-m. Nevertheless, by page 97, Guindi begins her argument about the role of veiling in not only women's but also men's social spheres. She argues that veiling initially indicated social class, provided a means for moving in and out of the holy states in the daily life of a Muslim, and established a definite social space for women and men alike, especially men of the Rashayda ethnicity.

Guindi then moves to describing men's forms of veiling to in a way that is defensive of and apologetic for both men's and women's forms of veiling. Her focus on Berber and Rashayda men's veiling practices are an attempt to further her argument that wearing the veil is empowering and not oppressive or imposed. Her concrete examples for this assertion range from Muslim women in India "beating" their husbands with their veils in a ritual every year to women in Bahrain attaching keys to their headdresses. In Guindi's argument, the example of women "beating" their husbands with their veils is significant because now the same women use sticks rather than veils to ritually "beat" their husbands, and Guindi thus equates the veil with beating stick. Similarly, Guindi argues that the attachment of keys to headdresses in Bahrain is symbolic because the veil is supposed to represent oppression while the keys, which represent freedom and autonomy, are attached to the symbols of women's oppression.

The next topic the book discusses is how the veil came to symbolize modesty and piety, especially when freely donned by college students in Egypt. Guindi argues that voluntary veiling and minimal public interaction between males and veiled females shows the power and prestige of the veil, especially when its wearer is modern and integrated into society. This Islamic, college-based movement is claimed to be the reason for an overall increase in Islamic, modest dress in Egypt after the 1970's, and thus Guindi champions the covering of women as a means of increasing women's power. Furthermore, she cites the Iranian revolution that followed the mandate that no women should wear the chador as an example of the symbolic investment of the Islamic moral code in the veil itself. This public desire to wear the veil, especially among women, is one of the main points of Guindi's contention that the veil is not oppressive, inherently evil, or imposed in any place, but rather is valued by both men and women for its ability to confer protection, modesty, and the preservation of the family reputation.

Although examples, such as the Iranian Revolution, are present in the book, it seems that this is more a work about anthropological method and Arabic linguistics than it is a comprehensive review of veiling practices in Islamic culture. This criticism is supported by Guindi's spending an entire chapter on the etymology of the Arabic root h-r-m. Furthermore, the fact that she quotes other authors more than she presents her own interpretation, especially when discussing anthropological theory, gives the impression that the title of the book is a misnomer. Instead, the title An Anthropological View of Arabic Veiling Etymology seems more fitting than Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance. Indeed, Guindi becomes bogged down in presenting a theory-heavy point of view and spends far too few pages discussing the actual implications of and drives to veil. Despite Guindi's methodological merit of presenting a non-ethnocentric picture of modern veiling, she fails to provide a comprehensive study. She seems to oppose any sort of Western theory about the veil as false merely because it is Western and not because of its ethnographic or scholarly flaws. In this sense, Guindi seems to beg the question of a purely ethnocentric point of view in all modern scholarship on the veil but does little to actually refute the arguments of such culturally positioned scholars.

Furthermore, Guindi's evidence in favor of her own point of view, especially the reinstitution of the veil in Iranian Revolution, seems to not-so-deftly ignore the effects of forced veiling on women who oppose donning the veil. While championing Iranian women for reasserting their culture and using the veil in a positive manner, Guindi avoids discussing the cultural and even psychological effects of a forcibly imposed chador on women who dislike or oppose the idea of the veil. This is perhaps the largest gap in Guindi's argument, especially when she seems to casually dismiss the imposition of chador in Iran as universally accepted in Iranian culture with no significant opposition. Furthermore, Guindi dismisses "the hysterics in the Western media about women in Afghanistan" as culturally positioned (185). Yet there comes a point when the issue is no longer about "Western" indignation about the treatment of women, but rather about human indignation about the subjugation of humans. This forced veiling also occurs in Saudi Arabia and such a widespread practice cannot merely be ignored away.

On a more aesthetic note, the writing in the book itself does not readily lend itself to being read. The convoluted nature of the theory-heavy, anthropological language and the prolific use of Arabic words and phrases would leave many language purists balking. Furthermore, the organization of the text is not only difficult to understand, but also quite choppy, jumping from one seemingly unrelated topic to another. This makes for a difficult time trying identify Guindi's argument and also frustrates anyone trying to read the book in a substantive way. Describing the organizing scheme as "topical" seems to be generous. Indeed, jumping from the history of veiling to the current ethnocentric bias in anthropological research can hardly be described as organized or planned in any way.

Although Guindi's holistic anthropological method possesses great potential, the actual book she has produced is politically correct ad nauseum, and generally convoluted in both argument and syntax. Guindi's purpose of providing a comprehensive study of veiling becomes doomed in quicksand-like... Read more ›
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