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Western Whiteness In An American Way Of Religious Conversion In Willow Wilson’s The Butterfly Mosque
ISSN: 2617 - 0299Publisher: author   
Western Whiteness In An American Way Of Religious Conversion In Willow Wilson’s The Butterfly Mosque
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Languages and Literatures
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1.3
Article Basics Score: 3
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International Category Code (ICC):
ICC-0902
Publisher: International Journal Of Linguistics, Literature And Trans..
International Journal Address (IAA):
IAA.ZONE/261739900299
eISSN
:
2617 - 0299
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Abstract
The purpose of this study is to delve into the matter of religious conversion of the narrator in Willow Wilson’s The Butterfly Mosque who is deemed to be a representation of a western ideology and society, the USA. The colonizer narrator who finds himself dominated by the western ideology considers her new religion as escapism and attempts to justify her thoughts and the ramifications occurred after experiencing conversion with reference to Islam that brought him with spiritualism. As the writer, the narrator, introduces herself an American Muslim, the whiteness of ideas and ideologies can declare an in-between character who reminds her memories with both sweet, days of Christianity, and confusing, days of being a Muslim. The hybrid narrator in this novel displays his life and journeys she has had to make so as to justify her psychic experience she faces. Being an Other despite her conversion from the heart is represented through qu...