Winner of the 2008 National Women's Studies Association Gloria
Anzaldua prize!
"Imagining Arab Womanhood" examines orientalist images of Arab
womanhood in the United States since the turn of the twentieth
century, exploring, in particular, representations of belly
dancers, harem girls, and veiled women. Through semiotic analysis,
Jarmakani demonstrates that these images have functioned as
nostalgic placeholders for pressing, yet unarticulated concerns
about shifting spatial and temporal realities within the contexts
of expansionism/modernization and imperialism/late capitalism.
Calling these representations cultural mythologies, Jarmakani maps
them onto dominant American narratives of power and progress,
insisting on an analysis that understands them to be artifacts
shaped by the interests of the American contexts in which they
circulate. "Imagining Arab Womanhood" is a vital addition to
conversations about representation, race, and gender.
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