'This chapter is a critical comparative analysis of the Muslim women’s corporeal capacitation of hijab as a sartorial strategy as represented in the Australian-Muslim writer Randa Abdel-Fattah’s novel Does My Head Look Big in This? (2005) and the Australian-American journalist Geraldine Brooks’s travelogue on the Middle East, Nine Parts of Desire (1994). Contextualising transnationally the sociopolitical significance of hijab, and reflecting on the geopolitical positionalities of these two Australian women authors, this chapter argues that to homogenise hijab as a coherent identity is a myopic observation. The chapter concludes with the assertion that the significance of hijab goes beyond the orient-occident paradigm; rather it is located in the subjectivity and selfhood of the individual wearer of hijab.'
Source: Abstract