"Rafia Zakaria, journalist and author, unravels the complex nexus of attitudes, policies, and histories revolving around this object in her fascinating new book, Veil. She demonstrates how the object can serve as a moral delineator, a disciplinary measure, a signifier of goodness, or as a means to subvert or rebel social norms. Through personal narratives and detailed analysis of various social and political conditions Zakaria offers an engaging and nuanced assessment of the veil in the contemporary context." - New Books Network
An intellectually bracing, beautifully written exploration of an item of clothing all too freighted with meaning. –
Molly Crabapple, artist, journalist, and author of Drawing Blood (2015) Rafia Zakaria's
Veil shifts the balance away from white secular Europe toward the experience of Muslim women, mapping the stereotypical representations of the veil in Western culture and then reflecting, in an intensely personal way, on the many meanings that the veil can have for the people who wear it ... Zakaria's more personal, philosophical approach is intended to contest the singular meaning that the veil has acquired in much of the West. By exploring the subjective experiences of the veil, we begin to see how both wearing it and not wearing it have profound psychic resonances for those who make these choices, as well as for those who regard it with hostility or even just curiosity ... [
Veil is] useful and important, providing needed insight and detail to deepen our understanding of how we got here–a necessary step for thinking about whether and how we might be able to move to a better place. -
Joan W. Scott, The Nation I admired Rafia Zakaria's
Veil months even before I read it ... Her engaging prose is just what I hoped to find inside this little book, which is composed of short vignettes on the veil rather than a sustained philosophical treaty." -
Reading Religion