American Journal of Islam and Society (Jan 2005)
Terror, Counter-Terror
Abstract
Terror, Counter-Terror: Women Speak Out presents articles by several women writers and women’s organizations. The book analyzes and interrogates the madness of male-dominated war and violence, and presents women’s perspectives on war and the 9/11 tragedy. Contributors include feminist writers, authors, academics, and journalists; mothers, women of color, Muslim women; and women who have had first-hand experience with war and its effects. The editors provide an excellent critical reappraisal of the ideas, concepts, and language that underpin the multilayered world of war, power, and peace. The book also explores diverse women’s perspectives on the failure of war to bring about peace. In giving their perspective, the authors respond eloquently and defiantly to war’s destructive nature. This collection, a wonderful anthology of women’s experiences of war, allows the reader to capture the suffering of war as well as its paradoxes, double standards, and contradictions. The essays are organized into seven sections: “Personal and Political,” “The War on Terror,” “Saying No,” “Motherland/ Fatherland,” “The War on Women,” “Displaced and Dispossessed,” and “Women against War.” The book highlights the wars in Afghanistan and Israel and the 9/11 tragedy. The authors lament that war has never really brought peace, but rather turmoil and human and economic suffering. Most people in the West see sanitized images of war that are carefully selected for them. Women Speak Out tells the story of how loosing one’s children, home, and livelihood are part of war’s true horrors ...