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musa

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Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2013) 9 (2): 4–31.
Published: 01 July 2013
...Christina Civantos The Egyptian feminist and educator Nabawiyya Musa (1886–1951), after publishing her autobiographical essays serially from 1938 to 1942, published them as a book under the title Ta’rikhi bi-qalami (My history, by my pen). This essay analyzes the material role of literacy...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2013) 9 (2): 1–3.
Published: 01 July 2013
... and epistemic violence. Although none of these articles deals with the recent Arab uprisings and the subsequent suppression of women’s con- tributions to their success, their stories hover. Whether the woman was a prominent political figure, like the Egyptian Nabawiyya Musa and the Turkish Halide Edib...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2021) 17 (2): 197–219.
Published: 01 July 2021
... city’s shift toward autocracy by calling dabke “barbaric” and refusing to comply. Musa, also a returnee, enters into a state of social death not long after he hears a beating whose rhythm he likens to dabke . Ossama Mohammed reckons with his state of exile and his distance from the revolution through...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2005) 1 (1): 6–28.
Published: 01 March 2005
... and patterns emerge. My notion that lineages of secular feminists were clear was shaken when I observed in Egypt that secular feminists and Islamist women both claimed Nabawiyya Musa, a pioneering educator and essayist who was a founding member of the Egyptian Feminist Union and a woman...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2011) 7 (1): 70–89.
Published: 01 March 2011
..., and other social and religious reform.9 She engaged in public exchanges with Mayy Ziyada and Nabawiyya Musa, leading figures in the nascent feminist movement. Nasif personally knew many of the leading female and male nationalists of her era, and, upon her death of influenza in 1918, she...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2014) 10 (1): 41–52.
Published: 01 March 2014
.... 1999 Mohamed Omer Bushara Emerges from Artistic Exile. Aljadid:   A Review & Record of Arab Culture and Arts 5:28 (Summer): 3,   with illustrations. 1998 Imagery and Invention: Sudanese at Home and in the World—   Conversations with Mohamed Omer Bushara and Musa Khalifa...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2005) 1 (3): 1–19.
Published: 01 November 2005
... as land grants. Her very wealth became a source of power, and this in turn allowed her to foster a series of sub- ordinate patronage networks. She had her own retinue, secretaries and other offi cials. Her qahram∂na, Umm Musa, became a locus of such a major patronage network that she...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2014) 10 (1): 133–148.
Published: 01 March 2014
... Omer Bushara and Musa Khalifa. In   Images of Enchantment: Performance, Image and Form in the   Contemporary Middle East, ed. Sherifa Zuhur. American University   in Cairo Press. 187 – 203. International Gender Discourses: Comparative Research Agendas and   Methodologies—The Middle East...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2021) 17 (3): 366–394.
Published: 01 November 2021
... swimming: conservative Shaykh Abul Ayun and educator Nabawiyya Musa. 25 World War II gave rise to shortages, inflation, and rationing, but also to new fashion. A 1942 cartoon appearing in the popular weekly magazine Ruz al-yusuf highlighted these issues: an awestruck man in traditional garb cowers...
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Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2009) 5 (2): 96–101.
Published: 01 July 2009
... of Ibn Khaldun, and author of the 1953 memorandum, “Th e Population Situation in Egypt”; and anthropologist Salama Musa, who formulated the notion of national personalities or essences. She illuminates but does not romanticize the nationalist project of rethinking social science...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2009) 5 (2): 23–52.
Published: 01 July 2009
... 1994 Ethnography, Epidemiology, and Infertility in Egypt. Social Science & Medicine 39 (5): 671–86. Inhorn, Marcia C., Luke King, Jerome O. Nriagu, Loulou Kobeissi, Najwa Hammoud, Johnny Awwad, Antoine A. Abu-Musa, and Antoine B. Hannoun 2008...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2014) 10 (3): 40–61.
Published: 01 November 2014
... – 27. Touraine, Alain 1990  Modernity and the Subject. Paper presented to the International Socio- logical Congress, Madrid, July 10. Widge 2012  Student Protests in Sudan: An Interview with Girifna Co-Founder Nagi   Musa. httpsouthsudaninfo.net/2012/06/student-protests...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2014) 10 (1): 15–40.
Published: 01 March 2014
... balancing acts of “holding on and letting go”—a way of be- ing she sees inflected in Sudanese artists Musa Khalifa and Mohamed Omer Bushara and that also constitute the wellsprings of creativity for 38  mn  Journal of Middle East women’s studies  10:1 Hale’s anthropology of art (Hale 1998...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2006) 2 (2): 35–59.
Published: 01 July 2006
... as the ‘other Clearly, more research is needed to assess the impact and reach of these online publications, and more documentation on the uses of this technology is needed before we can state with confidence, as Musa Shteiwi does, that the newer technology is “significantly contributing...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2009) 5 (1): 24–49.
Published: 01 March 2009
....” 13. As summarized by Samara (1987, 121); also in Abu Zahra 1957 and Musa 1958. 14. Th is view is also endorsed by Article 169 of the Book of Personal Status Rulings (see note 15 below) which states that the professional woman who remains outside her home during the day...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2007) 3 (3): 1–20.
Published: 01 November 2007
...; they include (in alphabetical order) Antoine Abu Musa, Johnny Awwaad, Abbass Fakih, Hasan Michael Fakih, Walid Ghutmi, Najwa Hammoud, Antoine Hannoun, Azhar Ismail, Da’ad Lakkis, Zaher Nassar, Gamal Serour, Khaled Sakhel, Hanady Shrara, Mohamed Yehia, Salah Zaki, and Tony Zreik. I also want to thank my...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2005) 1 (3): 20–45.
Published: 01 November 2005
..., and its subject matter, producing an alternative discourse on the history of Arab women. Other conferences focused on the work of leading women like Malak Hifni Nassif, Nabawiya Musa and ῾A’isha Taymur. Th e publications and research on these important fi gures placed special attention...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2017) 13 (3): 376–394.
Published: 01 November 2017
... of Siddiqa Musa ʿEid, a fifty-five-year-old laundry woman from Zaqaziq with nine recorded theft crimes; Naffusa Hassan al-Simbawi, a fifty-year-old married woman from Muski in Cairo with seven recorded theft crimes; Tafida Najib Maqqar, a forty-year-old dressmaker from Bulaq in Cairo; Saʿada Surur Ibrahim...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2008) 4 (1): 83–106.
Published: 01 March 2008
... Conference in 1918 was denied by the British. In 1923, aft er a newly (and nominally) independent Egypt restricted suff rage to men, they founded the Egyptian Feminist Union (EFU).5 Th at year Huda Shaarawi, Nabawiya Musa, and Saiza Nabarawi attended the IAW Congress in Rome...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2020) 16 (1): 19–40.
Published: 01 March 2020
... of nationalism took into account the problems facing Egypt at that time. Part and parcel of this was a strong focus on capitalism, particularly from the 1940s on. This followed on from an earlier feminist movement made up of women such as Huda Shaarawi, Nabawiyya Musa, Malak Hifni Nasif, and Saiza Nabarawi, many...