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El. knyga: Negotiating Identity and Transnationalism: Middle Eastern and North African Communication and Critical Cultural Studies

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"At the heart of Communication and Critical Cultural Studies is a discipline that has been slowly expanding its borders around the issues of racism, sexism, ability, privilege, and oppression. As Latinx, African American, Asian Pacific American, Disability and LGBTQ Studies widen and shift the scope of Communication Studies, what often gets underplayed is the role of transnational Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) Studies. It is imperative that the experiences of transnational individuals who live and move between the region and the U.S. are centered. For this reason, the goal of this book is to begin to bring Middle Eastern and North African Communication and Critical Cultural Studies in conversation with Global and Transnational Studies. We ask, how can scholars make a space for transnational MENA Studies within Communication and Cultural Studies? What are the pressing issues? Thus, at a time where Arabs, Arab Americans, Iranians, and Iranian Americans are under attack by Western media and governments, it is crucial to center their voices from a transnational perspective that privileges their positionalities and experiences rather than continue to study them from a reductive Eurocentric lens. We seek to build on existing scholarship by including essays that theorize from a Communication and Critical Cultural Studies lens. This book aims to bring together work by established and new or emerging scholars. Negotiating Identity and Transnationalism is suitable for academic researchers, scholars, students and activists in the fields of critical performative studies, cultural studies, rhetoric, feminist studies, queer studies, intercultural studies, social justice and media studies. The book can be taught in classes such as Media & Society, Intercultural Communication, Intersectional Feminism, Cultural Studies, Rhetoric and others"--

At the heart of Communication and Critical Cultural Studies is a discipline that has been slowly expanding its borders around the issues of racism, sexism, ability, privilege, and oppression. As Latinx, African American, Asian Pacific American, Disability and LGBTQ Studies widen and shift the scope of Communication Studies, what often gets underplayed is the role of transnational Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) Studies. It is imperative that the experiences of transnational individuals who live and move between the region and the U.S. are centered. For this reason, the goal of this book is to begin to bring Middle Eastern and North African Communication and Critical Cultural Studies in conversation with Global and Transnational Studies. We ask, how can scholars make a space for transnational MENA Studies within Communication and Cultural Studies? What are the pressing issues? Thus, at a time where Arabs, Arab Americans, Iranians, and Iranian Americans are under attack by Western media and governments, it is crucial to center their voices from a transnational perspective that privileges their positionalities and experiences rather than continue to study them from a reductive Eurocentric lens. We seek to build on existing scholarship by including essays that theorize from a Communication and Critical Cultural Studies lens. This book aims to bring together work by established and new or emerging scholars.



This book brings MENA Communication and Critical Cultural Studies in conversation with Global and Transnational Studies. It centers Arab, Arab American, Iranian and Iranian American voices from a transnational perspective that privileges their positionalities and experiences rather than studying them from a Eurocentric lens.

Preface ix
Sahar Khamis
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction 1(16)
Haneen Ghabra
Fatima Zahrae Chrifi Alaoui
SECTION 1 Negotiating Whiteness: Contextual MENA Perspectives in the United States and Beyond
Check-Mate: The MENA/Arab Double-Bind
17(14)
Marie-Odile N. Hobeika
Thomas K. Nakayama
Fragmented Paradigms of Transculturality: Negotiating Equivocal Agency in Refugee Representations in Refugee Resettlement Organizations
31(18)
Noor Ghazal Aswad
Rearticulating the "Good Muslim" in Times of Trump: Islamophilia and the Muslim Woman in the Women's March Poster
49(16)
Shereen Yousuf
SECTION 2 Negotiating Colonialism in MENA: Rhetorics of Populism and Violence in Identity Discourse
Neo-Colonial Representations of the "Grand Mufti," Benjamin Netanyahu, and the Reterritorialization of Palestine
65(12)
Marouf A. Hasian Jr.
Halal, Is It Meat You're Looking for? A History of Colonial Policy, Halal Meat and Violence
77(14)
Asim Qureshi
Representation from the Margins: Brexit, Turkey, and the Idea of "Europe"
91(14)
Matthew deTar
Smelling Beyond Sectarianism and Orientalism: Trash as Rhetorical Resistance in Lebanon's 2015 "You Stink" Protests
105(18)
Hana Masri
SECTION 3 Negotiating Identity: Literacy, Visual, and Comedic Perspectives
The Veiled Identity: Hijabistas, Instagram and Branding in the Online Islamic Fashion Industry
123(14)
Kelsey Waninger Minnick
Bamboo and Bougainvillea: Literary Perspectives on Identity and Belonging in Contemporary Kuwait
137(14)
Emanuela Buscemi
Laughing at One Thousand and One Western Tales about the Middle Eastern Others
151(18)
Julia Khrebtan-Horhager
SECTION 4 Negotiating Identity among Muslim, Arab and Asian Women: An Intersectional and Cultural Studies Approach
An Intersectional Approach to the Kafala System in Lebanon: Racialized, Sexualized and Exploitative Dimensions of Migrant Domestic Labor
169(14)
Sarah Gonzalez Noveiri
Secret Superhero in a Black Burka
183(22)
Gordon Alley-Young
Editors 205(2)
Contributors 207
Haneen Ghabra (Ph.D., University of Denver) is Assistant Professor at Kuwait Universitys Department of Mass Communication and author of the book, Muslim Women and White Femininity: Reenactment and Resistance (2018). She recently was the recipient for the Outstanding Article of the Year Award at the National Communication Associations (NCA) Feminist Division (November 2018). Her work has been published in Communication Inquiry, Text and Performance Quarterly and Liminalities: A Journal of Performance Studies.









Fatima Zahrae Chrifi Alaoui (Ph.D., University of Denver) is Assistant Professor and coordinator of graduate studies in the Department of Communication Studies at San Francisco State University. Her research engages critical rhetoric, political communication, new media, gender and sexuality studies, transnational feminism and social change in a variety of contexts, including social movements, political discourse and pop culture. More particularly, Dr. Alaouis scholarship considers how the often non-normative, un-institutionalized voices of resistance work to change their communities, and how normative or institutionalized discourses reinforce their ability to maintain power.









Shadee Abdi (Ph.D., University of Denver) is Assistant Professor of Communication at San Francisco State University. She is a critical cultural communication scholar whose research interests include intercultural, international, and diasporic communication, sexuality studies, family communication, performance studies, and performances of Iranian diaspora. Broadly, her work explores how conflicting discourses complicate and enhance our intersectional understandings of identity and power relative to race, culture, sexuality, gender, nationality, religion, ability, class, and family. She is specifically interested in narratives of resistance within familial and mediated contexts.









Bernadette Marie Calafell (Ph.D., University of North Carolina) is Professor and the inaugural Chair in the Department of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at Gonzaga University. She is author of Latina/o Communication Studies Theorizing Performance and Monstrosity, Performance, and Race in Contemporary Culture. She was the recipient of the Lilla A. Heston Award for Outstanding Scholarship in Interpretation and Performance, the Córdova-Puchot Award for Scholar of the Year, the Lambda Award, and the Francine Merritt Award from the National Communication Association.