Islamic veiling in Xinjiang: the political and societal struggle to define Uyghur female adornment

The Islamic veil is arguably the most politicized piece of fabric in the world, eliciting heated debate over its significance and complex meanings. The over 10 million Muslim women in China have their own histories and cultures of veiling. This article explores the ongoing struggle between the Chine...

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書目詳細資料
主要作者: Leibold, James (Author)
其他作者: Grose, Timothy A. (Other)
格式: Print Article
語言:English
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Interlibrary Loan:Interlibrary Loan for the Fachinformationsdienste (Specialized Information Services in Germany)
出版: 2016
In: The China journal
Year: 2016, 發布: 76, Pages: 78-102
Further subjects:B 宗教性
B 國家
B 頭巾
B 宗教團體
B China
B 维吾尔族
B 穆斯林
B 原因
B 女人
B 人口群組
B 種族
實物特徵
總結:The Islamic veil is arguably the most politicized piece of fabric in the world, eliciting heated debate over its significance and complex meanings. The over 10 million Muslim women in China have their own histories and cultures of veiling. This article explores the ongoing struggle between the Chinese Communist Party and Xinjiang's Uyghur Muslim minority over the right to define what is “appropriate” and “normal” female adornment. New styles of veiling have entered China from abroad, intensifying the controversy over the scope of Uyghur ethnic attire. We contrast the party-state's antiveiling campaign to eliminate popular styles in Xinjiang, with the diverse reasons and meanings Uyghur women and men attach to them. While the party-state strives to control and standardize Uyghur dress, the community itself responds, sometimes defiantly, with a complex registry of veiling practices that reflect everything from ethnonational resistance, increased religious faith, and global Islamic haute couture. (China J/GIGA)
實物描述:Ill., graph. Darst., Lit.
ISSN:1324-9347
Contains:In: The China journal