Available Formats
Islamic Fashion and Anti-Fashion: New Perspectives from Europe and North America
By (Author) Emma Tarlo
Edited by Annelies Moors
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
27th May 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social groups: religious groups and communities
391.0088297
Hardback
320
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
662g
Introducing innovative new research from international scholars working on Islamic fashion and its critics, Islamic Fashion and Anti-Fashion provides a global perspective on muslim dress practices. The book takes a broad geographic sweep, bringing together the sartorial experiences of Muslims in locations as diverse as Paris, the Canadian Prairie, Swedish and Italian bath houses and former socialist countries of Eastern Europe. What new Islamic dress practices and anxieties are emerging in these different locations How far are they shaped by local circumstances, migration histories, particular religious traditions, multicultural interfaces and transnational links To what extent do developments in and debates about Islamic dress cut across such local specificities, encouraging new channels of communication and exchange With original contributions from the fields of anthropology, fashion studies, media studies, religious studies, history, geography and cultural studies, Islamic Fashion and Anti-Fashion will be of interest to students and scholars working in these fields as well as to general readers interested in the public presence of Islam in Europe and America.
A stimulating and provocative collection of articles. Authors in Tarlo and Moors volume provide new data about Muslim womens dress in several sites. Details highlight the tensions surrounding decisions of what to wear from both wearers and viewers perspectives, dispelling stereotypes about what it means to be veiled or covered. Their introduction and its bibliography alone are worth the price of the book. -- Joanne B. Eicher, Editor-in-Chief, Encyclopedia of World Dress and Fashion
Reviewed * Religion Watch *
Emma Tarlo is Professor of Anthropology, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK. Annelies Moors is Professor of Social Scientific Study of Contemporary Muslim Societies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.