Visibly Muslim by Emma Tarlo

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Visibly muslim, an ethnography published by Emma Tarlo, portrays the visibility of British muslims through their fashion, politics and faith (Tarlo 2010). The text is constructed in a way that allows non-muslim readers to understand the culture of the muslim faith and take a look into the culture and the hardships they face in society, all through the eyes of a non-muslim British female (Tarlo 2010). Ethnicity is presented as an outlook a community has that sets them apart from the rest, either through dress, religion, language and/or solidarity, as presented in (Davis 2014) lecture material. In Visibly Muslim the visibility of ethnicity in an urban setting is discussed, and that visibility can be due to conflicts like media visibility through such events as 9/11 or the Jiljab controversy of 2002 and even everyday conflict between the cold interactions between muslims and non-muslims in our societies. Just like (Tarlo 2010) states that by wearing certain muslim dress in the western society it has lead to notions of injustice, misrepresentation and discrimination of the muslim people due to their visibility in society.

The media plays a massive role in the misrepresentation of Muslims throughout the world and many publications stimulate or assume stereotyping of muslims in societies (Aydin & Hammer 2009). When it comes to events such as 9/11, the London bombings of 2005 and the Danish cartoon controversy (Tarlo 2010) it can be seen that muslims are portrayed stereotypically in a violent way, creating conflict with being accepted into society. The cartoon controversy reasserted the association of Islam with violence and terrorism (Tarlo 2010) and this can have dramatic effects on the muslim population as a whole as it can create ...

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...ns muslim women must reflect on the Hijabs visibility and how it may be read by others living quite differently to them, therefore creating notions that because they show difference to many others, their visibility can be conflicting to the ‘white’ culture but the way in which non-islamic western culture acts towards the muslims, can have the cold, bitter effect.

Visibly muslim written by Emma Tarlo, portrays the ethnic visibility of the muslim faith in an urban western setting. When looking at the notion of conflict, it can be seen through the media controversies of 9/11 and the Danish cartoon controversy, that muslims have been visible in a negative light, and due to this, it could be said that interactions between muslims and non muslims can be discriminatory and cold, all exemplifying the factors of difference and otherness, portrayed by the muslim society.

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