Last
week Turkey’s top court announced plans to consider reinstating a headscarf ban
in universities. The ban, which had been in place for many years and was even
included in Turkey’s constitution, was overturned just last February, only to
spark intense debate over the future of secularism in the country.
The
headscarf is just as charged an image in the West as it is in predominantly
Islamic countries like Turkey. The covered Muslim woman is a common image in
Western media —often as a symbol of male brutality – and the debate over
whether the headscarf is religious freedom or female oppression still rages in
Europe.
But
in all the debate over Muslim women, how are Muslim men depicted?
In
Stolen Honor (May 2008), Katherine Pratt Ewing attempts to answer that
question with an ethnographic portrait of Muslim men (coincidentally, mostly of
Turkish decent) in contemporary Germany. Throughout her writings, Ewing focuses
on the stereotypes and stigma these men face, arguing that “even when men are
not mentioned directly, such narratives implicitly embed negative
representations. These representations are particularly prominent in Europe and
play a major role in the political process in many European countries, shaping
public policy, citizenship legislation, and the course of elections.”
These
negative stereotypes – compounded by the post-9/11 climate in which the Muslim
man is seen as a potential terrorist – have created significant social problems
for Muslim men living in the West. Moreover, Ewing asserts that “the
stigmatization of the masculinity of a minority such as Muslim men often goes
unnoticed because of the blind spots and silences that surround this
stigmatization. This sometimes invisible or implicit process of stigmatization
is linked to intertwined national and transnational imaginaries that rest on a
foundation of fantasy.”
With Stolen Honor, Katherine Pratt
Ewing looks at the creation of masculine identity and the struggles Muslim men
face in the Western world, and in doing so, quietly turns the discussion of
gender in Islam on its head.