Ahmed Study Guide
Discussion Questions for Ahmed's "Discourses of the Veil":
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How and why did the new discourse on the veil come to include issues of class and culture, colonizers and the colonized?
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What is the significance of Ahmed’s statement on p. 149 that this new discourse framed as a contest over culture (European vs. Egyptian) came to center on women and the veil?
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What does she mean by colonial feminism? (P. 151) What were the aims of this peculiar brand of feminism?
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What is Ahmed’s main critique of Qasim Amin’s work “The Liberation of Woman?” How, according to Ahmed, did the book fail to deliver on its promise?
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GENERAL QUESTION TO THINK ABOUT: Why are women in general regarded as the upholders of CULTURE? What implications does that have for their societal roles?
Additionally, keep the following points in mind as you read.
- Qasim Amin's "The Liberation of the Woman," published in 1899.
By 1890's, the state had already established schools for girls, so why the controversy?
- because of the symbolic reform he advocated - the abolition of the veil.
-beginning of feminism in Arab culture
-first battle of the veil to agitate the Arab press - p. 145 Encompassed issues of class and culture; colonizers and the colonized
- p. 145 ISSUES OF WOMEN AND CULTURE FIRST APPEARED AS INEXTRICABLY FUSED IN ARABIC DISCOURSE
- p. 145 Egypt supplied raw materials for the British.
- p. 146 Benefited certain classes within Egypt—European residents within Egypt, the Egyptian upper classes, and the new middle class of civil servants and intellectual elite.
- p. 146 Traditional knowledge became devalued; the ulama' were affected
- p. 147 Accentuation of class divisions; glass ceiling for lower middle class occupations
- p. 147 Fear that education could lead to dangerous nationalist sentiments
- p. 147 Issues of culture and attitudes toward Western ways intertwined with issues of class and access to economic resources, position, and status.
- pp. 147-148: Laws unjustly skewed in favor of the British colonizers
- p. 148- Class and economic divisions plus political and ideological divisions
- p. 148 - Spectrum of views—minority Arabs sometimes sided with the British
—religious and secular nationalism - p. 149: WOMEN AS UPHOLDERS OF CULTURE—CONTEST OVER CULTURE CENTERED ON WOMEN AND THE VEIL
- p. 149: Western narrative of women in Islam
- p. 150: Female Western travelers sometimes had a more sympathetic view
- p. 150: Why are women central in this discourse of culture?
- p. 150-51: THE OTHER CULTURE as defined according to Victorian standards
- p. 151: Colonialism appropriated the language of feminism and redirected it towards other men's cultures COLONIAL FEMINISM
- p. 152: Cromer's views on Islam, women and the veil.
- p. 153: Views on women's education
- p. 154-57: How were colonial binaries set up (for example, Muslims backward, lazy etc.; Egyptian women—ignorant and debased compared to the exact opposite in the West)
- p. 160: Why was it assumed that an assault on the veil by Amin reflected internalization of colonialist rhetoric?
- p. 161-162: What is the significance of Ahmed pointing out that the colonial rhetoric on women’s emancipation merely called for a substitution of Islamic style male dominance for that of Western style male dominance?
- p. 162: As Ahmed notes, more than thirty books and articles appeared in response to Amin’s provocative book? Why do you think the book was considered so provocative in its day?
Copyright 2009,
by the Contributing Authors.
Cite/attribute Resource.
Afsaruddin, A. (2007, May 03). Ahmed Study Guide. Retrieved November 23, 2009, from Notre Dame OpenCourseWare Web site: http://ocw.nd.edu/arabic-and-middle-east-studies/women-in-islamic-societies/lecture-and-study-materials/ahmed-study-guide.
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