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In Gendered Fortunes, Zeynep K. Korkman examines Turkey's
commercial fortunetelling cafes where secular Muslim women and
LGBTIQ individuals navigate the precarities of twenty-first-century
life. Criminalized by long-standing secularist laws and disdained
by contemporary Islamist government, fortunetelling cafes
proliferate in part because they offer shelter from the
conservative secularist, Islamist, neoliberal, and gender pressures
of the public sphere. Korkman shows how fortunetelling is a form of
affective labor through which its participants build intimate
feminized publics in which they share and address their hopes and
fears. Korkman uses feeling-which is how her interlocutors describe
the divination process-as an analytic to view the shifting
landscape of gendered vulnerability in Turkey. In so doing, Korkman
foregrounds "feeling" as a feminist lens to explore how those who
are pushed to the margins feel their way through oppressive
landscapes to create new futures.
This special issue advances transnational feminist approaches to
the globally proliferating phenomenon of anti-Muslim racism. The
contributors trace the global circuits and formations of power
through which anti-Muslim racism travels, operates, and shapes
local contexts. The essays center attention on and explore the
gendered, sexualized, and racialized forms of anti-Muslim
oppression and resistance in modern social theory, law, protest
cultures, social media, art, and everyday life in the United States
and transnationally. The contributors illuminate the complex nature
of global anti-Muslim racism through various topics including
Islamophobia in the context of race, gender, and religion; hate
crimes; the sexualization of Islam in social media; queer Muslim
futurism; the connection between secularism and feminism in
Pakistan; the racialization of Muslims in the early Cold War
period; and anti-Muslim racism in Russia. Together the essays
provide a complex picture of the multifaceted nature of the
worldwide spread of anti-Muslim racism. Contributors. Evelyn
Alsultany, Natasha Bakht, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Taneem Husain, Amina
Jamal, Amina Jarmakani, Zeynep K. Korkman, Minoo Moellem, Nadine
Naber, Tatiana Rabinovich, Sherene H. Razack, Tom Joseph Abi Samra,
Elora Shehabuddin, Saiba Varma
In Gendered Fortunes, Zeynep K. Korkman examines Turkey's
commercial fortunetelling cafes where secular Muslim women and
LGBTIQ individuals navigate the precarities of twenty-first-century
life. Criminalized by long-standing secularist laws and disdained
by contemporary Islamist government, fortunetelling cafes
proliferate in part because they offer shelter from the
conservative secularist, Islamist, neoliberal, and gender pressures
of the public sphere. Korkman shows how fortunetelling is a form of
affective labor through which its participants build intimate
feminized publics in which they share and address their hopes and
fears. Korkman uses feeling-which is how her interlocutors describe
the divination process-as an analytic to view the shifting
landscape of gendered vulnerability in Turkey. In so doing, Korkman
foregrounds "feeling" as a feminist lens to explore how those who
are pushed to the margins feel their way through oppressive
landscapes to create new futures.
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