“a sensitive treatment with many merits. Charania examines not only what has been said about them but what they say about their own situations, in so doing challenging readers to engage with the women and/or their situations. The book provides a great deal of fodder for those knowledgeable about or interested in visual culture. Recommended”—Choice; “This book is gender studies research at its best! By placing the visual field within a nuanced socio-historical analysis, Charania destabilizes the Western visual construction of the Pakistani woman with an exacting feminist analysis...and renders visible the ways in which the Pakistani woman has been used to legitimize neocolonial and militarist interventions.”—R. Danielle Egan, professor and chair of Gender and Sexuality Studies, St. Lawrence University; “A powerful, layered critique of the geopolitics and racialized erotics of Muslim women’s representations. Feminist and queer in its stance, this book is a singular contribution to scholarship.”—Jyoti Puri, professor of sociology, Simmons College of Arts and Sciences; “This brilliant, careful, detailed analysis of multiple kinds of figures of Pakistani women that currently travel in transnational media, books and film, fruitfully troubles and radically expands our knowledge of the place of gender, sexuality and racialization in the (neo-)colonial production of otherness and its materialized deployment in global politics. Charania’s stunning, intensely insightful book is a must read for scholars of cultural studies, postcolonial and decolonial studies, gender studies, queer studies, transnational sociology, peace and conflict studies, media studies and South Asia Studies.”—Paola Bacchetta, Department of Gender and Women's Studies, University of California, Berkeley.