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women responding to the anti-Islam film Fitna: voices and acts of citizenship on YouTube

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Feminist Review

Abstract

In 2008, Dutch anti-Islam Member of Parliament Geert Wilders produced a short video called Fitna to visualize his argument that Islam is a dangerous religion. Thousands of men and women across the globe uploaded their own videos to YouTube to criticize or support the film. In this article, we look at these alternative videos from a feminist perspective, contrasting the gender portrayal and narratives in Fitna with those in the alternative videos. We contend that Fitna expressed an extremist Orientalist discourse, in which women are presented as the current and future victims of the oppression of Muslim men and Islam. In contrast, the YouTube videos give voice to women themselves who come from across the globe, are relatively young and often active Muslims. Second, they express different view points in generically new ways, criticizing and ridiculing Wilders or producing serious and committed explanations of their own understanding of Islam. Third, although relatively few women appeared in the videos, those that did speak for themselves, not only take on Wilders, but also claim their right to speak within Islam. We propose to understand these videos as acts of citizenships through which women constitute themselves as global citizens, in some cases by engaging in ‘deliberation’ as it is understood in feminist political theory, in other cases by taking a ‘voice’ that can be responded to.

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Figure 1

Similar content being viewed by others

Notes

  1. Wilders said this in an interview with a Dutch newspaper, Volkskrant, 7 October 2006. Retrieved on 6 July 2010, http://www.volkskrant.nl/binnenland/article577161.ece/

  2. This work is part of a larger research project, which includes further work on the complete corpus of 1,413 videos. This project, led by Liesbet van Zoonen, is funded under the Religion and Society programme by the AHRC and ESRC (AH/GO16631/1). See: http://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ss/research/FITNA/index.html

  3. Abu Hamza al Masri was detained by the British authorities in 2004 on allegations of terrorism; Al Samarai was a supporter of Saddam Hussein who has not been seen since 2003.

  4. The tool can be downloaded for free from http://lexiurl.wlv.ac.uk/searcher/youtube.html

  5. The full coding sheet is available from the project website.

  6. While we had archived the quranmiracles videos, her suspension (along with her whole channel and all videos) made it impossible to get in touch with this poster for more information and to gain clarification.

  7. For example http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nen318ns3OU, accessed on 8 March 2010, see also Van Zoonen et al. (2009).

  8. All translations from Dutch by the authors, URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0AkRAG6Yyfs, accessed on 8 March 2010.

  9. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfcA41PCcoo, accessed on 8 March 2010.

  10. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f0ET9qez-Ks, accessed 8 March 2010.

  11. Calculated on the basis of viewing numbers on 9 March 2010. Excluding the reloads of Fitna, the call of Queen Rania which attracted over a million views by itself, and three videos that were removed by that day because of copyright issues.

  12. The significance of the coded differences was tested with the X2 test for association of nominal variables (X2=32, p=0.01).

  13. Ibid (X2=55.5, p=0.05).

  14. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=frZmIZTHC04, accessed 12 February 2010.

  15. Title: Re Fitna the movie. URL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pF0AANuODOU.

  16. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kw4TjTtlWCU, accessed 8 March 2010.

  17. We analysed the motives and aims of the posters in another part of the research. See http://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ss/research/FITNAindex.html.

  18. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qK2VErvUHww, accessed 12 February 2010.

  19. We cover the discussions that followed these and other videos that were uploaded in response to Fitna in: Van Zoonen, L. Mihelj, S. and Vis, F. (under review), ‘YouTube interactions between agonism, antagonism and dialogue: video responses to the anti-Islam film Fitna’. See http://www.lboro.ac.uk/departments/ss/research/FITNA/index.html.

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Vis, F., van Zoonen, L. & Mihelj, S. women responding to the anti-Islam film Fitna: voices and acts of citizenship on YouTube. Fem Rev 97, 110–129 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1057/fr.2010.29

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