Friendship, Fear, and Female Agency in Just Another Jihadi Jane
Abstract
Tabish Khair’s Just Another Jihadi Jane (2017) reframes the contemporary radicalization narrative through the intimate, ethically complex friendship of Jamilla and Ameena—two British Muslim teenagers who leave Yorkshire for Syria. Avoiding sensationalism, the novel interrogates gender, class, and faith without reducing its protagonists to stereotypes. Reading the novel’s confessional structure alongside postcolonial feminism and radicalization studies, this essay argues that Khair foregrounds female agency as “contextualized transgression” rather than simple victimhood, while exposing the seductions—and bankruptcies—of absolutist belonging.
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