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Journal Article

Citation

Haque E. Soc. Ident. 2010; 16(1): 79.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13504630903465902

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

In the present global context, the 'problem' of religion in relation to gender has become predominantly about the situation of Muslim women and what this indicates about the state of our civilization. Thus, in such incidents as the death of Aqsa Parvez (age 16) in late 2007 in Toronto, Canada, Muslim women's bodies, as many scholars have argued, become the battlegrounds which clearly demarcate the line between the civilized secular modern nation and premodern religious fundamentalisms. In this paper, I want to extend this critical work by bringing in an analysis of the second or 'homegrown' generation as it is in this context, I will argue that national anxieties about Canada's global status as a tolerant multicultural nation are most pronounced. Drawing on the work of Asad (2003), Mahmood (2006) and Brown (2006), I will outline how conceptions of tolerance and secularism operate through culture to produce a racialized distinction between the civilized, modern citizen and premodern fundamentalist groups in the making of Canada as a white settler multicultural nation. In order to illustrate this concretely, I will carry out a critical content analysis of representations of Aqsa Parvez's death in the media, representations which clearly demonstrate the contemporary operation of secularism and tolerance in relation to multiculturalism and its particular intensity as it pertains to second generation Muslims. In the conclusion, I want to reflect on how we might rethink our understanding of violence against women among Muslims in order to destabilize this powerful binaristic framing which continues to secure a white settler hegemony of 'multiculturalism within a bilingual framework' even as it obscures the power relations through which it sustains a racial hierarchy.

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