
New Books Network Deanna Ferree Womack, "Re-Inventing Islam: Gender and the Protestant Roots of American Islamophobia" (Oxford UP, 2025)
Dec 21, 2025
Deanna Ferree Womack, an Associate Professor at Emory University and ordained Presbyterian minister, discusses her groundbreaking work on the roots of American Islamophobia. She reveals how 19th-century Protestant missionaries shaped stereotypes about Muslims, particularly through gendered narratives. Womack connects historical perceptions to contemporary Christian-Muslim dialogues, emphasizing the impact of missionary literature and visual culture. She also highlights the critical role of women missionaries and their unique contributions to shaping views on Islam.
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Reinventing Islam As Strategic Reuse
- Reinventing Islam means Protestants recycled older ideas about Muslims for new theological and political aims.
- Deanna Ferree Womack shows Protestants repeatedly reshaped inherited images to justify evangelism and empire.
Reformation Images Rooted In Ottoman Power
- Early Protestant portrayals of Muslims were shaped by fear and admiration of Ottoman power.
- Those portrayals crystallized into tropes of threatening Muslim men and controlled sultans with harems.
The Veil's Meaning Changed Over Time
- Protestant descriptions of Muslim women shifted across eras from praise to seeing veiling as oppression.
- Womack links these gendered shifts to changing Western ideas about women's social roles.
