The Othered Woman: How White Feminism Harms Muslim Women
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'An urgent, vital contribution to the feminist conversation – one that tears through the comfortable myth of universal sisterhood' Alya Mooro, author of The Greater Freedom
An astounding insight into how white feminism is intertwined with Islamophobia, and why Muslim women are so often left out of the conversation.
Growing up, journalist Shahed Ezaydi was asked how she could possibly call herself a feminist if she also practised her faith. By treating Muslim women as invisible and excluding them from feminist spaces, or hyper-visible with an obsession of ‘saving’ them, we are perpetuating gendered Islamophobia and white feminism. But Muslim women don’t need to be saved, and religion is not the only form of oppression.
The Othered Woman is the book Ezaydi wishes her younger self could have turned to, to dispel the myths of how Muslim women are oppressed and who by. It shows that these myths translate into very real harm at state level in the UK and globally, and showcases the many intersectional feminists fighting for liberation in their own way. Accessible and compelling, this is urgent reading for anyone who considers themselves a feminist.
'An in-depth analysis of the toxic influence of white feminsim and its impact on Muslim women globally' Friday Magazine
'Lays bare how Muslim women have been persistently sidelined by the very movements claiming to fight for our liberation’ Nafisa Bakkar, CEO of Amaliah
'A powerful, clear-eyed reckoning with the exclusions at the heart of white feminism. Shahed Ezaydi illuminates what so many need to see' Freya Bromley, author of The Tidal Year
'Meticulously researched and robustly articulated, this is a timely analysis of white feminism's performative solidarity' Samia Rahman, author of Muslim Women and Misogyny