The Forbidden Modern: Civilization and VeilingThis book by prominent Turkish scholar Nilüfer Göle examines the complex relationships among modernity, religion, and gender relations in the Middle East. Her focus is on the factors that influence young women pursuing university educations in Turkey to adopt seemingly fundamentalist Islamist traditions, such as veiling, and the complex web of meanings attributed to these gender-separating practices. Veiling, a politicized practice that conceptually forces people to choose between the "modern" and the "backward," provides an insightful way of looking at the contemporary Islam-West conflict, shedding light on the recent rise of Islamist fundamentalism in many countries and providing insight into what is a more complex phenomenon than is commonly portrayed in accounts by Western journalists. Göle's sociological approach, employing a number of personal interviews, allows for both a detailed case study of these young Turkish women who are turning to the tenets of fundamental Islamist gender codes, and for a broader critique of Eurocentrism and the academic literature regarding the construction of meaning. Both perspectives serve as a springboard for the launching of theoretical innovations into feminist, religious, cultural, and area studies. "A timely book, whose publication in English will contribute to a variety of scholarly debates. It promises to be provocative and widely read among scholars interested in issues of modernism and identity, women's social movements, the status of women in Islamic societies, and the broader issues of public versus private spheres." --Nilüfer Isvan, State University of New York, Stony Brook The Forbidden Modern: Civilization and Veiling was originally published as Modern Mahrem by the Turkish publisher Metis and has been translated into French, German, and Spanish. Nilüfer Göle is Professor of Sociology, Bogaziçi University. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
The Touchstone of Westernization | 27 |
The Civilizing Mission | 57 |
Copyright | |
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Alain Touraine Ankara argued Bulaç charshaf civil law civilizational claim clothing habits concept conflict Constitutional Period contemporary criticized defined depicted distinct elites European expressed Fatima Mernissi female identity femininity feminism feminist gender Golden Age Halide Edip Halide Edip Adıvar human Ibid ideal ideology individual intellectual Iranian Revolution Islamic identity Islamic movement Islamic women Islamist movements Islamist women issue Istanbul Kemal Koran lifestyles mahrem morality motherhood Muslim countries Muslim women Namık Kemal orientation Ottoman society Paris Peyami Safa political Islam politicization polygamy position of women power relations principle of equality private sphere public sphere question of women radical Islamic realm reference religion religious republican roles secularism Şerif Mardin sexes sexuality Sharia social actors sociological symbol Tanzimat Period Tarih ve Toplum tion traditional Türk Turkey Turkish Turkish society Türkiye'de Turks urban utopia visibility of women West Western civilization Western modernity Western world Westernist woman Yayınları Zaman Ziya Gökalp