scispace - formally typeset
R

Reina Lewis

Researcher at University of the Arts London

Publications -  51
Citations -  1848

Reina Lewis is an academic researcher from University of the Arts London. The author has contributed to research in topics: Feminism & Islam. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 49 publications receiving 1799 citations. Previous affiliations of Reina Lewis include University of East London & University of Delaware.

Papers
More filters
BookDOI

Feminist Postcolonial Theory : A Reader

Reina Lewis, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Reina Lewis and Sara Mills have assembled a brilliant selection of thinkers, organizing them into six categories: "Gendering Colonialism and Postcolonialism/Radicalizing Feminism," "Rethinking Whiteness," "Redefining the 'Third World' Subject," "Sexuality and Sexual Rights," "Harem and the Veil," and "Gender and Post/colonial Relations." A bibliography complements the wide-ranging essays.
Book

Gendering Orientalism: Race, Femininity and Representation

TL;DR: In contrast to most cultural histories of imperialism, which analyse Orientalist images of rather than by women, Gendering Orientalism focuses on the contributions of women themselves Drawing on the little-known work of Henriette Browne, other ''lost' women Orientlist artists and the literary works of George Eliot, Reina Lewis challenges masculinist assumptions relating to the stability and homogeneity of the Orientalist gaze.
Book

Rethinking Orientalism: Women, Travel, and the Ottoman Harem

Reina Lewis
TL;DR: Rethinking Orientalism as discussed by the authors provides the first monograph on English-language books by Ottoman women from the turn of the twentieth century, focusing on how the Ottoman women intervened in local debates about female emancipation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Veils and Sales: Muslims and the spaces of postcolonial fashion retail

TL;DR: The authors analyzed the presence of veiled assistants in London fashion shops as examples of spatial relations that are socializing and ethnicizing, linking veils to fashion (and Islam to modernity) and connecting recent international Muslim lifestyle consumer cultures to gendered consumption in the development of Middle Eastern modernities.