Understanding The Experiences of Muslim Women Who Wear The Hijab in Public Spaces
Subsequent Statement of Responsibility
Clifton, Jennifer
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
The University of Texas at El Paso
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2019
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
100
DISSERTATION (THESIS) NOTE
Dissertation or thesis details and type of degree
M.A.
Body granting the degree
The University of Texas at El Paso
Text preceding or following the note
2019
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
In view of the invisibility of Arab(ic)-Islamic rhetorics and the dominance of scholarship on Christian rhetorical traditions in rhetorical studies alongside an increased visibility of public rhetorics about Islamic women in American politics, this research explores the experiences and performances of veiled Muslim women in public spaces. While much of rhetorical scholarship on public spheres focuses on public talk or the circulation of public texts, in this study, I, together with six veiled Muslim women in El Paso, Texas, explore how veiled Muslim women navigate the hijab's visibility as a marker of difference with strangers-simultaneously performing and provoking performative public rhetorics of spatialization. Using Michel Foucault's theories of biopolitics, discipline, and technologies of the self in conversation with Hubert Herman's dialogical self theory and Dorothy Smith's feminist standpoint theory as theoretical lenses, I theorize rhetorics of public spatialization around the Islamic veil as a way of understanding the biopolitical and disciplining rationalities underpinning such rhetorics as veiled Muslim women encounter strangers in public places in the U.S. Not only do I analyze and visually represent the injurious, overlapping and conflicting discourses that veiled Muslim women encounter in public spheres, I also attend to how the women exhibit rhetorical dexterity in (re)constructing subjectivities that enable them to assert their agency and freedom, to resist strangers' attempts to define the women's ontological realities and to espouse standpoints that challenge dominant discourses about the Islamic veil. I conclude by inviting scholars and educators in rhetorical studies to adopt pedagogical practices that include the experiences of veiled Muslim women in rhetorical discourses and to enact rhetorical invention that frames differences - religious, cultural, racial, sexual - in public life as sites of deliberation and intercultural knowledge building.