Mainstreaming the Headscarf: Islamist Politics and Women in the Turkish Media
By (Author) Esra zcan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
20th May 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Middle Eastern history
Gender studies: women and girls
Social groups: religious groups and communities
305.409561
Paperback
280
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
395g
With the rise to power of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the early 2000s in Turkey, the headscarf that used be looked down upon by the secular middle and upper classes moved to the mainstream. It has since become a symbol of desirable womanhood. This development has pushed Turkeys secular feminists, who had been critical of the headscarf ban, to the margins. This book is the first to trace this new phase of conservative gender politics by examining the images of womens headscarves across secular and Islamic news media. Based on the analysis of photographs and the columns of conservative women journalists, the book sheds light on how the AKP is transforming the image of womanhood. It also identifies the rise of the conservative female journalist as an important phenomenon in the country. Esra zcan problematizes designators such as Islamist women or Islamic feminists and instead aims to understand these women in terms of their commitment to right-wing activism and politics, which has so far been ignored. An original contribution to feminist scholarship on Muslim women, this book draws on the unique perspectives of Visual Culture and Communication Studies.
Mainstreaming the Headscarf is a theoretically engaging book rich with in-depth examples and analyses of Turkish media and proposing new ways to break right-wing conservative hegemonic media rule by authoritarian governments. Ozcan does this by carefully avoiding binaries like secular versus Islamist in her discussion throughout the book. It is a rich book, which advocates new methods to counter hate media by AKP government through first-hand personal insights and anecdotes while making theoretically rich propositions. -- Murat Akser, European Journal of Communication
zcans observation about the closing of the coalitional space in the womens movement begs many productive questions for future research. * European Journal of Womens Studies *
Esra zcan is Professor of Practice in the Department of Communication at Tulane University, New Orleans. She has published in various books and journals including Feminist Approaches to Media Theory and Research and Introduction to Women's Studies: A Reader as well as the European Journal of Communication; Feminist Media Studies; and Popular Communication. She received her PhD in Communication Studies from Jacobs University Bremen in Germany.