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16. Time to Seize the Opportunity: A Call for Action from Sudan
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Fatma Osman Ibnouf
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xiii
- Introduction Advancing Women’s Rights in the Arab World 1
-
Part I. What They Fight For
- 1. Barefoot Feminist Classes: A Revelation of Being, Doing, and Becoming 13
- 2. The Labor Strikes That Catalyzed the Revolution in Egypt 28
- 3. From a Smear Campaign to the Kuwaiti Parliament: My Resolve Persists Despite Rumors 40
- 4. Palestinian Queerness and the Orientalist Paradigm 44
- 5. “With All My Force . . .”: Men against Domestic Violence in Lebanon 50
- 6. “Ne Touche Pas Mes Enfants!”: A Woman’s Campaign against Pedophilia in Morocco 53
- 7. Two Nonviolence Campaigns Initiated by Women in Syria 58
- 8. Refusing the Backseat: Women as Drivers of the Yemeni Uprisings 68
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Part II What They Believe
- 9. “Women Are Complete, Not Complements”: Terminology in the Writing of the New Constitution of Tunisia 83
- 10. A Patriotic Christian Woman in the Syrian Parliament 96
- 11. Iraqi Women’s Agency: From Political Authoritarianism to Sectarianism and Islamist Militancy 98
- 12. Hidden Voices, Hidden Agendas: Qubaysiat Women’s Group in Syria 107
- 13. The Egyptian Revolution and the Feminist Divide 117
- 14. Algerian Feminists Navigate Authoritarianism 129
- 15. Failing the Masses in Syria: Buthaina Shabaan and the Public Intellectual Crisis 135
- 16. Time to Seize the Opportunity: A Call for Action from Sudan 143
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Part III. How They Express Agency
- 17. Long before the Arab Spring: Arab Women’s Cyberactivism through AWSA United 147
- 18. Aliaa Elmahdy, Nude Protest, & Transnational Feminist Body Politics 161
- 19. Sensing Queer Activism in Beirut: Protest Soundscapes as Political Dissent 173
- 20. On the Contrary: Negation as Resistance and Reimagining in the Work of Bahia Shehab 185
- 21. Half Syrian Sufi Blogger: Faith and Activism in the Virtual Public Space 198
- 22. The Light in Her Eyes: A Woman Is a School. Teach Her and You Teach a Generation: An Interview with Filmmakers Julia Meltzer and Laura Nix 204
- 23. Writing Lebanese Feminist History: Rose Ghurayyib’s Editorial Letters in Al- Raida Journal from 1976 to 1985 208
- 24. Um Sahar, the Adeni Woman Leader in al- Hirak Southern Independence Movement in Yemen 217
-
Part IV. How They Use Space to Mobilize
- 25. Marching with Revolutionary Women in Egypt: A Participatory Journal 223
- 26. Memories of Martyrs: Disappearance and Women’s Claims against State Violence in Libya 233
- 27. Mapping the Egyptian Women’s Anti– Sexual Harassment Campaigns 245
- 28. A Village Rises in the First Intifada: International Women’s Day, March 8, 1988 259
- 29. Revolutionary Graffiti and Cairene Women: Performing Agency through Gaze Aversion 267
- 30. Celebrating Women’s Day in Baghdad, the City of Men 283
- 31. Waiting for the Revolution: Women’s Perceptions from Upper and Lower Rural Egypt 290
- 32. New Media/New Feminism(s): The Lebanese Women’s Movement Online and Offline 299
-
Part V. How They Organize
- 33. Genesis of Gender and Women’s Studies at the University of Fez, Morocco 311
- 34. My Revolution! 318
- 35. Women’s Political Participation in Bahrain 321
- 36. Strategies of Nonviolent Resistance: Syrian Women Subverting Dominant Paradigms 330
- 37. Driving Campaigns: Saudi Women Negotiating Power in the Public Space 339
- 38. Reclaiming Space(s): Kuwaiti Women in the Karamat Watan Protests 348
- 39. “The Factory of the Revolution”: Women’s Activism in the Syrian Uprisings 354
- 40. Arab American Women and the Arab Spring: An Interview with Summer Nasser 363
- Acknowledgments 367
- About the Editors 369
- About the Contributors 371
- Index 383
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Foreword xiii
- Introduction Advancing Women’s Rights in the Arab World 1
-
Part I. What They Fight For
- 1. Barefoot Feminist Classes: A Revelation of Being, Doing, and Becoming 13
- 2. The Labor Strikes That Catalyzed the Revolution in Egypt 28
- 3. From a Smear Campaign to the Kuwaiti Parliament: My Resolve Persists Despite Rumors 40
- 4. Palestinian Queerness and the Orientalist Paradigm 44
- 5. “With All My Force . . .”: Men against Domestic Violence in Lebanon 50
- 6. “Ne Touche Pas Mes Enfants!”: A Woman’s Campaign against Pedophilia in Morocco 53
- 7. Two Nonviolence Campaigns Initiated by Women in Syria 58
- 8. Refusing the Backseat: Women as Drivers of the Yemeni Uprisings 68
-
Part II What They Believe
- 9. “Women Are Complete, Not Complements”: Terminology in the Writing of the New Constitution of Tunisia 83
- 10. A Patriotic Christian Woman in the Syrian Parliament 96
- 11. Iraqi Women’s Agency: From Political Authoritarianism to Sectarianism and Islamist Militancy 98
- 12. Hidden Voices, Hidden Agendas: Qubaysiat Women’s Group in Syria 107
- 13. The Egyptian Revolution and the Feminist Divide 117
- 14. Algerian Feminists Navigate Authoritarianism 129
- 15. Failing the Masses in Syria: Buthaina Shabaan and the Public Intellectual Crisis 135
- 16. Time to Seize the Opportunity: A Call for Action from Sudan 143
-
Part III. How They Express Agency
- 17. Long before the Arab Spring: Arab Women’s Cyberactivism through AWSA United 147
- 18. Aliaa Elmahdy, Nude Protest, & Transnational Feminist Body Politics 161
- 19. Sensing Queer Activism in Beirut: Protest Soundscapes as Political Dissent 173
- 20. On the Contrary: Negation as Resistance and Reimagining in the Work of Bahia Shehab 185
- 21. Half Syrian Sufi Blogger: Faith and Activism in the Virtual Public Space 198
- 22. The Light in Her Eyes: A Woman Is a School. Teach Her and You Teach a Generation: An Interview with Filmmakers Julia Meltzer and Laura Nix 204
- 23. Writing Lebanese Feminist History: Rose Ghurayyib’s Editorial Letters in Al- Raida Journal from 1976 to 1985 208
- 24. Um Sahar, the Adeni Woman Leader in al- Hirak Southern Independence Movement in Yemen 217
-
Part IV. How They Use Space to Mobilize
- 25. Marching with Revolutionary Women in Egypt: A Participatory Journal 223
- 26. Memories of Martyrs: Disappearance and Women’s Claims against State Violence in Libya 233
- 27. Mapping the Egyptian Women’s Anti– Sexual Harassment Campaigns 245
- 28. A Village Rises in the First Intifada: International Women’s Day, March 8, 1988 259
- 29. Revolutionary Graffiti and Cairene Women: Performing Agency through Gaze Aversion 267
- 30. Celebrating Women’s Day in Baghdad, the City of Men 283
- 31. Waiting for the Revolution: Women’s Perceptions from Upper and Lower Rural Egypt 290
- 32. New Media/New Feminism(s): The Lebanese Women’s Movement Online and Offline 299
-
Part V. How They Organize
- 33. Genesis of Gender and Women’s Studies at the University of Fez, Morocco 311
- 34. My Revolution! 318
- 35. Women’s Political Participation in Bahrain 321
- 36. Strategies of Nonviolent Resistance: Syrian Women Subverting Dominant Paradigms 330
- 37. Driving Campaigns: Saudi Women Negotiating Power in the Public Space 339
- 38. Reclaiming Space(s): Kuwaiti Women in the Karamat Watan Protests 348
- 39. “The Factory of the Revolution”: Women’s Activism in the Syrian Uprisings 354
- 40. Arab American Women and the Arab Spring: An Interview with Summer Nasser 363
- Acknowledgments 367
- About the Editors 369
- About the Contributors 371
- Index 383