Redefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction

Mobile Muslim women in Pakistan transcend the dualistic reductive discourses of the secular and the religio-cultural to carve out a distinctive modern subjectivity which is neither Western secular nor local religio-cultural; instead, it is interstitial. Pakistani fiction in English explores how mobi...

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Autores principales: Muhammad Safdar, Musarat Yasmin
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Taylor & Francis Group 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/46bb57b8c74f42499943a7023d3afc3d
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:46bb57b8c74f42499943a7023d3afc3d2021-11-17T14:22:00ZRedefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction2331-198310.1080/23311983.2021.2001158https://doaj.org/article/46bb57b8c74f42499943a7023d3afc3d2021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311983.2021.2001158https://doaj.org/toc/2331-1983Mobile Muslim women in Pakistan transcend the dualistic reductive discourses of the secular and the religio-cultural to carve out a distinctive modern subjectivity which is neither Western secular nor local religio-cultural; instead, it is interstitial. Pakistani fiction in English explores how mobile Muslim women in Pakistan choose their battles to renegotiate and redefine their gendered role of wifehood. However, it is still under-researched in this regard. In this paper, we aim to examine the effectiveness of empowerment enabled by the mobility of Muslim women to redefine their wifehood subjectivity as depicted in the fiction by Mohsin Hamid and Kamila Shamsie. Drawing on the concepts of performativity by Judith Butler and third-space by Homi K Bhabha, we interpret female characters from Moth Smoke and How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Hamid and Broken Verses by Shamsie as reflective of the women’s struggles to renegotiate the role of wifehood. Beyond the dualistic discourses, we examine and discuss the variously situated Muslim women’s exercise of mobility-shaped third-space and its agentiveness. We argue that though mobility variously empowers them, the common factor among them all is that it enables them to negotiate without exclusive adherence to the local religio-cultural and the universalist Western secular discourses. We also foreground mobility as a source of agency in general to challenge the reductive discourses that view Muslim women as a monolithic passive entity.Muhammad SafdarMusarat YasminTaylor & Francis Grouparticlemobilitywifehoodmuslim womenthird-spacemohsin hamidkamila shamsieFine ArtsNArts in generalNX1-820General WorksAHistory of scholarship and learning. The humanitiesAZ20-999ENCogent Arts & Humanities, Vol 8, Iss 1 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic mobility
wifehood
muslim women
third-space
mohsin hamid
kamila shamsie
Fine Arts
N
Arts in general
NX1-820
General Works
A
History of scholarship and learning. The humanities
AZ20-999
spellingShingle mobility
wifehood
muslim women
third-space
mohsin hamid
kamila shamsie
Fine Arts
N
Arts in general
NX1-820
General Works
A
History of scholarship and learning. The humanities
AZ20-999
Muhammad Safdar
Musarat Yasmin
Redefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction
description Mobile Muslim women in Pakistan transcend the dualistic reductive discourses of the secular and the religio-cultural to carve out a distinctive modern subjectivity which is neither Western secular nor local religio-cultural; instead, it is interstitial. Pakistani fiction in English explores how mobile Muslim women in Pakistan choose their battles to renegotiate and redefine their gendered role of wifehood. However, it is still under-researched in this regard. In this paper, we aim to examine the effectiveness of empowerment enabled by the mobility of Muslim women to redefine their wifehood subjectivity as depicted in the fiction by Mohsin Hamid and Kamila Shamsie. Drawing on the concepts of performativity by Judith Butler and third-space by Homi K Bhabha, we interpret female characters from Moth Smoke and How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia by Hamid and Broken Verses by Shamsie as reflective of the women’s struggles to renegotiate the role of wifehood. Beyond the dualistic discourses, we examine and discuss the variously situated Muslim women’s exercise of mobility-shaped third-space and its agentiveness. We argue that though mobility variously empowers them, the common factor among them all is that it enables them to negotiate without exclusive adherence to the local religio-cultural and the universalist Western secular discourses. We also foreground mobility as a source of agency in general to challenge the reductive discourses that view Muslim women as a monolithic passive entity.
format article
author Muhammad Safdar
Musarat Yasmin
author_facet Muhammad Safdar
Musarat Yasmin
author_sort Muhammad Safdar
title Redefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction
title_short Redefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction
title_full Redefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction
title_fullStr Redefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction
title_full_unstemmed Redefining Pakistani Muslim wifehood in Hamid’s and Shamsie’s fiction
title_sort redefining pakistani muslim wifehood in hamid’s and shamsie’s fiction
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/46bb57b8c74f42499943a7023d3afc3d
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