posted on 2020-04-02, 14:25authored byKimberley Brayson
<p>The 2016 burkini controversy and the criminalization of
visibly Muslim women in France is a violent reminder of the precarity of
colonial bodies in public space. These laws demonstrate the ongoing management
of colonial bodies and communities which speaks over time from historical
colonization to present, and future, neocolonial narratives. This article moves
beyond the dominant logics of security and gender oppression in the Islamic
dress debate which, it is argued, are invoked in a strategic manner to
obfuscate the colonial condition and engender a normative, institutional
Islamophobia in the public‐political imaginary. It critiques the instrumental
use of law in creating political space for such agendas and analyses the
whiteness of public space and institutions. The article insists that it is
necessary to acknowledge the epistemic lens of the colonial condition in the
Islamic dress debate and critically reflects on the alienation and reduced
capacity for action of bodies wearing Islamic dress.</p>