Startseite Sozialwissenschaften 6 From age of despair to window of opportunity? Reframing women’s sexuality in later life in the Middle East and North Africa
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6 From age of despair to window of opportunity? Reframing women’s sexuality in later life in the Middle East and North Africa

  • Shereen El Feki und Selma Hajri
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Abstract

This chapter explores a largely overlooked area within a taboo topic: older women’s sexuality in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Focusing on research on menopause in Tunisia, Turkey and Iran, the chapter highlights historically rooted patriarchal constraints on women’s sexuality within the region (often based on selective interpretations of Islam) and, simultaneously, how (some) women are beginning to speak out, especially in the newer in-between spaces of social media, on a range of related and ‘controversial’ issues connected with sexuality. Research shows a similar range of responses to menopause in the three countries varying according to older women’s class and education, from those reflecting traditional framings of loss (of fertility, attractiveness and desire) to those expressing liberation from fear of conception (or even unsatisfying sex), which can reflect feminist articulations of women’s pleasure. Even in the former narrative, sexual loss can be compensated by increased value and authority accorded older women. However, health services in MENA, dominated by reductionist ideas of menopause as dysfunction, remain poorly equipped to support older (menopausal) women, and require a sea-change – including better education of both physicians and patients and greater involvement of male partners – in order to address their patients’ sexual and emotional needs.

Abstract

This chapter explores a largely overlooked area within a taboo topic: older women’s sexuality in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Focusing on research on menopause in Tunisia, Turkey and Iran, the chapter highlights historically rooted patriarchal constraints on women’s sexuality within the region (often based on selective interpretations of Islam) and, simultaneously, how (some) women are beginning to speak out, especially in the newer in-between spaces of social media, on a range of related and ‘controversial’ issues connected with sexuality. Research shows a similar range of responses to menopause in the three countries varying according to older women’s class and education, from those reflecting traditional framings of loss (of fertility, attractiveness and desire) to those expressing liberation from fear of conception (or even unsatisfying sex), which can reflect feminist articulations of women’s pleasure. Even in the former narrative, sexual loss can be compensated by increased value and authority accorded older women. However, health services in MENA, dominated by reductionist ideas of menopause as dysfunction, remain poorly equipped to support older (menopausal) women, and require a sea-change – including better education of both physicians and patients and greater involvement of male partners – in order to address their patients’ sexual and emotional needs.

Heruntergeladen am 8.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.56687/9781447368441-010/html?lang=de
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