Watch the Video of Masculinities in the Making Panel
Watch the Video of Masculinities, Violence, and Affective Economies
Muslim Masculinities: Gender, Religion, and the Everyday brings together Penn, national, and international scholars examining Muslim masculinities in all their complexities within and beyond the United States. While there has been extensive focus on Islam and gender, it has been predominantly in relation to femininities. This conference intervenes in the dominant discourse by shifting the conversation to Muslim masculinities. We seek to theorize Muslim masculinity not only as an embodied performance and discursive representation, but also as a practice of power, de-linked from the male body. Hence, we will bring together scholars across the disciplines of religious studies, anthropology, political science, literature, history, and gender, sexuality and women’s studies whose work examines masculine posturing by women, nation-states, religious groups, and/or development organizations. Relatedly, we will also examine militant masculinities enacted by both men and women. This symposium will be a forum for people to share current work and discuss issues and concerns, and to plan future directions for collaborative research.
This event is co-sponsored by the departments of Political Science, History, Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations, English, and Anthropology, South Asia Center, Africana Studies/Center for Africana Studies, South Asia Studies, Middle East Center, the Education, Culture, and Society Program (GSE) and Social Policy and Practice.
Schedule: PLEASE NOTE UPDATED TIMES
9:30AM – 10:00AM: Breakfast
10:00AM - 10:15AM: Welcome, Kathleen Brown, Director of the Alice Paul Center & GSWS Program
10:15AM - 10:30AM: Why Muslim Masculinities? Framing our Conversations, Shenila Khoja-Moolji, University of Pennsylvania
10:30AM - 12:00PM: Masculinities in the Making
Na dupatta sar pe, na paon mein jhuti, bhagi baar: Queering Islam, Amanullah De Sondy, University College Cork, Ireland
Bodies of Terror: Constructions of Gender and Muslimness, Arshad Ali, George Washington University - CANCELLED
Dare to Care: Labor and the Making of Working-Class Men in Urban Egypt, Farha Ghannam, Swarthmore College
Masculinity and Authenticity in the American Muslim Blogosphere, Sadaf Jaffer, Princeton University
12:00PM - 12:30PM: Lunch
12:30PM - 2:15PM: Masculinity, Violence, and Affective Economies
Killing Children, Honour Crimes, and Queer Masculinity in the Making of War, Natalie Kouri-Towe, University of Pittsburgh
Constructing the Terrorist-Monster in the News: Muslim masculinities and Mediatized Culture-Talk, Mariam Durrani, Hamilton College
Western Foreign Fighters and the Islamic State, Joshua Roose, Australian Catholic University, Australia
Sporting Cultures between “model minority” and “terrorist", Stanley Thangaraj, City College of NewYork
Sexual economies of war and sexual technologies of the body: Militarised Muslim masculinity and the Islamist production of concubines for the caliphate, Fatima Seedat, University of Cape Town
2:15PM—2:30PM: Reflections, Remarks by Jamal Elias, University of Pennsylvania
2:30PM - 4:00PM: Moderated Discussion& QA : Panelists & Audience
4:00PM – 5:00PM: Reception