An Interdisciplinary Journal
The Girl in the Hijab
Call for Papers
Although
hijab has long been a Western cultural fixation, in the past few years
the girl in the hijab has been in the sociopolitical spotlight. With the
hijab being the most visible way to identify and be identified as
Muslim, those who wear it experience the world in unique ways. The
experiences of girls and young women in hijab are undoubtedly shaped by
intersectional experiences (Collins 2015) under interlocking systems of
domination (hooks 2015).
In
part enacted by Islamophobia that operates as a global meta-narrative
and through localized discourses, laws, and systems (Bakali 2016),
violence against women and girls in hijab is further entangled in being
gendered; it operates through power and discourse institutionalized by
laws such as Bill 21 in Quebec and similar measures in France. Such
institutional acts wed “save the Muslim girl” narratives that position
Muslim girls and women as oppressed victims in need of rescue, to the
controlling images of the suspicious Other in the form of the “save us
from the Muslim girl” (Saleh 2021: 2) narratives. Violence has also been
enacted overtly through hate crimes, evidenced most recently in the
Canadian attacks on mainly young Black hijabi women in Alberta and the
murder of a Muslim family in Ontario, as well as through violence in
schools such as happened in Virginia, US, when a peer, in assaulting a
Muslim girl, pulled off her hijab. Research on Islamophobia to date has
been heavily focused on experiences of Muslim youth in the contexts of
imperialism and white supremacy, while intersectional perspectives that
consider the unique and nuanced experiences of hijabi girlhood are
scarcer. Although the hijabi girl is often the location whereon white
supremacist, imperialist, and patriarchal violence is enacted, she is
also a possible site of resistance in her countering expressions of
power through everyday actions and activist engagement.
In this special issue of Girlhood Studies,
we invite articles based on a range of methodological approaches to
investigate the multidimensional, interdisciplinary, and intersectional
experiences of girls and young women who wear the hijab and/ or identify
as hijabi. We particularly encourage articles that investigate hijabi
girls as political actors who practice resistance to systemic
domination. Articles may include empirical research, case studies,
autoethnographic experiences, and artistic representations in addition
to theoretical or methodological insights. Along with conventional
articles and visual essays, alternative contributions such as a very
short screenplay or piece of fiction, poetry, or lyrics will be
considered, as will material produced by those who identify as girls and
young women.
Articles are invited to respond to questions such as:
- How do the intersections of gender and race shape girls’ experiences of wearing the hijab in various contexts?
- How
do dominant political forces (patriarchy, white supremacy, imperialism,
colonialism, capitalism) and their intersections shape the Muslim and
hijabi girl experience?
- What
are the complex “controlling images” (see the title of Patricia Hill
Collins’s (1991) work) of hijabi girls that operate in the social world,
and what are the implications for Muslim girls and women?
- How do Muslim and hijabi girls practice resistance and broadly defined activism (Vanner and Dugal 2020)?
- How do Muslim and hijabi girls experience and resist gender-based and sexual violence?
- How does the narrative of the “good Muslim” (Saleh 2019: 243) affect hijabi girls’ lives?
- How
are Muslim girls (hijabi and non-hijabi) at various intersecting
identities portrayed across different media (social, TV, film)
platforms?
- What types of images and narratives of hijabi girls dominate in influencer culture across various social media platforms?
- What are the unique experiences of girls who wear the hijab in education systems and/or in health systems?
This
special issue is to be guest edited by Salsabel Almanssori and Muna
Saleh. Please direct inquiries to Salsabel Almanssori at thegirlinthehijab.gsj@gmail.com.
Salsabel Almanssori,
who has worked as a middle-school teacher for the past seven years, is a
doctoral candidate and instructor at the Faculty of Education and the
Department of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Windsor.
In her interdisciplinary dissertation research, she uses narrative
inquiry to investigate the intersections between and among feminist
theory, teacher education, and gender-based and sexual violence. Her
most recent peer-reviewed articles shed light on girls’ use of digital
public pedagogy as a medium of resistance to rape culture in a post
#MeToo world, and student perspectives on gender-based violence in
education. Hijabi girlhood is an integral part of her personal lived
experience.
Muna Saleh
is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Education at Concordia
University of Edmonton (CUE), former elementary and secondary school
teacher, and the author of Stories We Live and Grow By: (Re)Telling Our Experiences as Muslim Mothers and Daughters
(2019). Drawing on her experiences as an intergenerational survivor of
violent Palestinian displacement and as a caregiver to a child with a
dis/ability, her most recent research includes a narrative inquiry
alongside Muslim mothers of children with dis/abilities who arrived in
Canada with refugee experiences.
Article Submission
Abstracts are due by 15 June 2022 and should be sent to thegirlinthehijab.gsj@gmail.com.
Full manuscripts are due by 15 November 2022.
Authors should provide a cover page giving brief biographical details
(up to 100 words), institutional affiliation(s) and full contact
information, including an email address.
Articles
may be no longer than 6,500 words including the abstract (up to 125
words), keywords (6 to 8 in alphabetical order), notes, captions and
tables, acknowledgments (if any), biographical details (taken from the
cover page), and references. Images in a text count for 200 words each.
Authors are responsible for securing copyright for any images used.
Girlhood Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal,
follows Berghahn’s preferred house style, a modified Chicago Style.
Please refer to the Style Guide online:
journals.berghahnbooks.com/_uploads/ghs/girlhood-studies_style_guide.pdf
For more information, please see www.berghahnjournals.com/girlhood-studies.