Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam

abstract: The thesis I have written aims to investigate the underlying reasons why France has considered Islam as unassimilable and why it has targeted Muslim women’s bodies to force assimilation. In the first section of the thesis, I examine the colonial relationship between France and Algeria. I c...

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Other Authors: Ahmed, Noura (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44232
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-442322018-06-22T03:08:30Z Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam abstract: The thesis I have written aims to investigate the underlying reasons why France has considered Islam as unassimilable and why it has targeted Muslim women’s bodies to force assimilation. In the first section of the thesis, I examine the colonial relationship between France and Algeria. I conclude that Algeria’s independence from France significantly influenced the negative treatment towards immigrants in postcolonial France. I then study the racist discourse that dominated French politics in the 1980s; and clarify how this has laid the foundation for the first attempt to ban the headscarves in public schools during the 1980s. The final section explores the 2004 ban on conspicuous religious symbols, a ban that significantly targeted the headscarf. I conclude that the prohibition of the headscarf undermined the rights of Muslim women and symbolized France’s inability to accept Islam, since France feared Islam’s visibility weakened a dominant French identity. Dissertation/Thesis Ahmed, Noura (Author) Keahey, Jennifer (Advisor) Toth, Stephen (Committee member) Behl, Natasha (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Islamic studies Gender studies History Algeria Assimilate France Hijab Muslim Women postcolonialism eng 67 pages Masters Thesis Social Justice and Human Rights 2017 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44232 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2017
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Islamic studies
Gender studies
History
Algeria
Assimilate
France
Hijab
Muslim Women
postcolonialism
spellingShingle Islamic studies
Gender studies
History
Algeria
Assimilate
France
Hijab
Muslim Women
postcolonialism
Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam
description abstract: The thesis I have written aims to investigate the underlying reasons why France has considered Islam as unassimilable and why it has targeted Muslim women’s bodies to force assimilation. In the first section of the thesis, I examine the colonial relationship between France and Algeria. I conclude that Algeria’s independence from France significantly influenced the negative treatment towards immigrants in postcolonial France. I then study the racist discourse that dominated French politics in the 1980s; and clarify how this has laid the foundation for the first attempt to ban the headscarves in public schools during the 1980s. The final section explores the 2004 ban on conspicuous religious symbols, a ban that significantly targeted the headscarf. I conclude that the prohibition of the headscarf undermined the rights of Muslim women and symbolized France’s inability to accept Islam, since France feared Islam’s visibility weakened a dominant French identity. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Social Justice and Human Rights 2017
author2 Ahmed, Noura (Author)
author_facet Ahmed, Noura (Author)
title Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam
title_short Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam
title_full Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam
title_fullStr Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam
title_full_unstemmed Unveiled: France’s Inability to Accept Islam
title_sort unveiled: france’s inability to accept islam
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44232
_version_ 1718701479697580032