Skip to content
10% OFF EVERYTHING when you spend £20 - Use Code: RWXMAS10 - Must end Monday 29th 9am
10% OFF EVERYTHING when you spend £20 - Use Code: RWXMAS10 - Ends Monday 9am

Refashioning Muslims

Merve Kütük-Kuris

Women between the New Conservatism and Neoliberalism in Istanbul

Barcode 9781399526425
Hardback

Original price £108.66 - Original price £108.66
Original price
£108.66
£108.66 - £108.66
Current price £108.66

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 31/03/2025

Genre: Philosophy & Spirituality
Sub-Genre: Religion
Label: Edinburgh University Press
Series: Critiquing Gender & Islam: Transnational, Intersectional and Queer Perspectives
Language: English
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Women between the New Conservatism and Neoliberalism in Istanbul
A rare account of neoliberal Muslim female subjectivity in Turkey’s elite Islamic bourgeois circles.
Refashioning Muslims explores the self-presentations and daily performances of young, bourgeois, fashion-conscious Muslim female entrepreneurs who emerged as new social actors in fields of fashion, leisure, charity and the family during the 2010s. It examines how these Muslim fashionistas significantly bolster governmental capacity to build public consent by projecting images of successful entrepreneurs, benevolent philanthropists and ideal mothers. However, their performances entail moments of imperfection and moral dilemma as they navigate market demands and everyday aspirations often conflicting with Islamic orthodoxy and traditional gender order. The book analyses how Muslim fashionistas cooperate with and challenge religious, classed, and gendered ideals, shaping a neoliberal Muslim subjectivity in the new Turkey. Drawing on Ricoeur's notion of 'narrative identity' and Bourdieu's notion of 'regulated liberties', the book argues that women's subjectivities are guided by the dynamic unity of the narrative configuration of the self, and formed through a complex interplay between autonomy and (self-)regulation.