Giving Voice to Dutch Moroccan Girls on the Internet
Mitra
and Watts (2002) provide a theoretical lens to achieve insight into the
perspectives of marginalized groups and their use of the internet (p. 480).
Muslim girls in the Netherlands are victims of forced marriages, arranged by
their families, or victims of beatings by their fathers or husbands.
In particular Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the Somalian Member of Parliament of the liberal right wing party, cites such images of women in relation to Islam (Moors, 2005; Ghorashi, 2003). Mitra (2001) points out that immigrants are now able to form networks on the Internet, which allows them to have “a sense of belonging” (p. 30). Mitra demonstrates that through voicing their views on homepages a group of diasporic Indians transforms their identities and images, and challenges some of the stereotypical images produced by the dominant culture. Marginalized people can articulate their oppositional ideologies, and question the dominant view of them, on their homepages. Read More>>>>>>>
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