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Gender, Veiling, and Class: Symbolic Boundaries and Veiling in Bengali Muslim Families

Authors :
Md Abdus Sabur
Source :
Gender & Society. 36:397-421
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2022.

Abstract

In Bangladesh, due to economic growth and greater access to education, more girls and women are veiling, even as they are also more likely to be in school or employed. Some scholars identify this trend of women appearing both “more modern” and “more religious” as paradoxical. On the basis of 114 in-depth interviews with Bangladeshi migrant workers ( n = 57) in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Singapore, and South Korea and their wives ( n = 57) in rural Bangladesh, I claim that Muslim women in middle-class Bengali families who veil are cultivating symbolic boundaries guided by an accountability structure of middle-class religiosity and gender conservatism. The increasing tendency of middle-class Muslim women to appear both “more modern” and “more religious” can be explained by examining the role that veiling plays in signaling class status through conspicuous consumption, moral superiority, and respectable femininity, differentiating them from lower class women. I conclude that “doing gender” through veiling must be understood as also “doing middle-class difference” in Bengali Muslim families in rural Bangladesh.

Details

ISSN :
15523977 and 08912432
Volume :
36
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gender & Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........87b466e54fe43a801b0022eed2fc0a1d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/08912432221089631