This article reconsiders some Western textual and visual (mis)representations of Muslim women as mentally imprisoned by Islamic rules and patriarchy through analyzing three prominent films by the Iranian screenwriter and director, Hatef Alimardani (b. 1976). It begins by a brief discussion of the portrayals of women in Islamic societies promulgated by Anglo-American media. Then, by examining For Pooneh’s Sake (Beh Khāter-e Pooneh, 2013), The Nameless Alley (Kucheh-ye Binām, 2015), and Ābā Jān (2017), box-office hits offering sociocultural critiques through realistic cinematic depictions of contemporary Iranian society, it demonstrates how Alimardani’s films dismantle stereotypical and essentialist portrayals of Muslim women by Western media...
Much ink has been spilled on the history of veiling, reveiling, and unveiling in various parts of th...
This study addresses the relationship between the veil and the constitution of what I have tenned th...
The method for torturing prisoners at Abu Ghraib was chosen because it was assumed that the Islamic ...
This article reconsiders some Western textual and visual (mis)representations of Muslim women as men...
From Mahvash, the Iranian entertainer who sang and danced coquettishly in numerous Iranian films tha...
Gönül Dönmez-Colin's book, Women, Islam and Cinema, comes not a day too soon. At a time when controv...
Think Muslims in films or television and you may recall Tasneem Qureishi from Homeland or, more rece...
This is a book review of Patricia R. Owen, Gender and Patriarchy in the Films of Muslim Nations: A F...
The films of Majid Majidi act as a looking glass to a religion and culture that has been under much ...
Iranian cinema as a modern art has always been influenced by political, cultural and social changes....
Honor Violence Rising In The West (2011) is a documentary film made by Hurd Dale. This short film de...
The 1979 Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War that began in 1980 have played an effective role in recons...
The purpose of this article is to look into how women are portrayed in Moroccan media, particularly ...
Historically, Muslim female bodies have been a key focus of attention in colonial and patriarchal di...
In post-revolutionary Iran, cinema became a medium for social critique of the prevailing issues in m...
Much ink has been spilled on the history of veiling, reveiling, and unveiling in various parts of th...
This study addresses the relationship between the veil and the constitution of what I have tenned th...
The method for torturing prisoners at Abu Ghraib was chosen because it was assumed that the Islamic ...
This article reconsiders some Western textual and visual (mis)representations of Muslim women as men...
From Mahvash, the Iranian entertainer who sang and danced coquettishly in numerous Iranian films tha...
Gönül Dönmez-Colin's book, Women, Islam and Cinema, comes not a day too soon. At a time when controv...
Think Muslims in films or television and you may recall Tasneem Qureishi from Homeland or, more rece...
This is a book review of Patricia R. Owen, Gender and Patriarchy in the Films of Muslim Nations: A F...
The films of Majid Majidi act as a looking glass to a religion and culture that has been under much ...
Iranian cinema as a modern art has always been influenced by political, cultural and social changes....
Honor Violence Rising In The West (2011) is a documentary film made by Hurd Dale. This short film de...
The 1979 Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War that began in 1980 have played an effective role in recons...
The purpose of this article is to look into how women are portrayed in Moroccan media, particularly ...
Historically, Muslim female bodies have been a key focus of attention in colonial and patriarchal di...
In post-revolutionary Iran, cinema became a medium for social critique of the prevailing issues in m...
Much ink has been spilled on the history of veiling, reveiling, and unveiling in various parts of th...
This study addresses the relationship between the veil and the constitution of what I have tenned th...
The method for torturing prisoners at Abu Ghraib was chosen because it was assumed that the Islamic ...