Tag: Veil

The Black Veil A Memoir with Digressions


Free Download The Black Veil: A Memoir with Digressions by Rick Moody
English | 2002 | ISBN: 0316578991 | 323 Pages | EPUB | 2.3 MB
In this astonishingly inventive book, Moody tells the story of his collapse and recovery in an inspired journey through what it means to be young and confused, older and confused, guilty, lost, and healed.

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Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil Condensed Version


Free Download Rethinking Muslim Women and the Veil: Condensed Version By Katherine Bullock
2010 | 35 Pages | ISBN: 1565643585 | PDF | 1 MB
The need to challenge the negative stereotype of the veil as oppressive is urgent. It is on many people’s minds and the debate on whether to wear or not to wear is becoming ever more heated. This work focuses on the popular Western cultural view that the veil is oppressive for Muslim women and highlights the underlying patterns of power behind this constructed image of the veil. It examines the colonial roots of this negative stereotype and challenges the arguments of liberal feminists such as Mernissi to assert that in a culture of consumerism, the veil can be experienced as a liberation from the tyranny of the beauty myth and the thin ideal of woman

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Black Men from behind the Veil Ontological Interrogations


Free Download George Yancy professor of philosophy Emory University, "Black Men from behind the Veil: Ontological Interrogations "
English | ISBN: 1666906476 | 2022 | 234 pages | EPUB, PDF | 557 KB + 13 MB
The Black male scholars within this important book are painfully aware that the brutal murder of George Floyd was not due to a few "bad apples." They understand that they are perceived as "threats" and "criminals" within a distorted white imaginary that is embedded with processes of mythopoetic construction, racial capitalism, and a deep anti-Black male social ontology. Edited by prominent philosopher George Yancy, Black Men from behind the Veil: Ontological Interrogations emphasizes the importance of Black male epistemic agency and the courage to speak the truth regarding an America that values Black male life on the cheap and that attempts to control the movement of Black men, their capacity to breathe, and their being through anti-Black technologies of surveillance, confinement, policing, and white nation-building. There is no single monolithic Black male voice that dominates this crucial and necessary text. Each voice speaks of pain behind the Veil, revealing narrative specificity and an important recursive truth: Black men, within the white American psyche, are both necessary and yet disposable. The existential and sociohistorical weight of this truth is made painfully clear through the voices of these Black men.

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