Never in the history of human civilization has the veil, hijab or purdah become so much of a contentious issue. At the root of the contention, however, it has always been politics. This volume mainly focuses on South Asia, where the veiling of women has been a part of its age-old civilization, indeed, more as a marker of civility and not always from the standpoint of masculinity. But then in recent times, the territoriality of societies in the name of 'modern state' and the power of both patriarchy and masculinity reinforcing it made the veiling of women, in one form or another, an exercise in patriarchy, masculinity or gender politics, often crisscrossing national, ethnic, racial and religious boundaries, with women as its main victims. This volume attempts to overcome our 'ignorance' in so far as the veil is concerned. Demystifying the politics of veiling can certainly contribute to emancipatory politics in South Asia and beyond. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction by Imtiaz Ahmed Section I Afghanistan Chapter 1 Behind the Veil: How Taliban Rules of Law Still Shroud Contemporary Afghanistan by Anastasia Telesetsky Section II Bangladesh Chapter 2 The Politics of Knowledge and the Veiling of the Veil by Amena Mohsin Chapter 3 Muslim Bodies, Imperial Politics and Feminist Frames by Dina M Siddiqi Section III India Chapter 4 The Politics of Covering and Uncovering in India by Ambar Ahmad Chapter 5 The Painted Veil and its Contours by Dipannita Datta Chapter 6 Food, Faith and Body: ‘Veiling’ and ‘Unveiling’ in the Borderland of West Bengal by Sreeradha Datta and Nandini Bhattacharya Panda Section IV Maldives Chapter 7 Democracy, Veil and Security in the Maldives by Emma Fulu Section V Nepal Chapter 8 Women, Veil and Security in the Nepalese Perspective: The Mist of Stereotypes and Superstition by Shobhakar Budhathoki Section VI Pakistan Chapter 9 ‘Purday kay Peechay Kya Hai?’ The Shifting Contexts of the Politics of Veiling by Saba Gul Khattak Chapter 10 Pukhtun Women, Veil and Security by Nasreen Ghufran Section VI Sri Lanka Chapter 11 Reforming Dress Practices Among the Sri Lankan Muslim Middle Class: A Ten-year Trajectory by Farzana Haniffa
Title
Women, Veiling and Politics: The South Asian Conundrum
Dr Imtiaz Ahmed is Professor of International Relations and Director, Centre for Genocide Studies at the University of Dhaka. He is also currently Visiting Professor at Sagesse University, Beirut, Lebanon. He has authored, co-authored, and edited 33 books and nine monographs. Dr Ahmed heads several national and international projects and published more than 120 research papers and scholarly articles in leading journals and edited volumes. His recent publications are the following books: Women, Veiling and Politics: The South Asian Conundrum, edited (Dhaka: The University Press Limited, 2020); Civil Society, State & Democratic Futures in Bangladesh (Dhaka: Prothoma Prokashan, 2020); COVID-19: the otherside of living through the pandemic, edited (Dhaka: Pathak Shamabesh, 2021); and Rights, Rivers, and the Quest for Water Commons: The Case of Bangladesh (Berlin: Springer, 2021).