I.B. Tauris Handbook to Gendering the Cultural Histories of the Modern Arab World

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Arab World
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Christianity
Culture
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Family
Femininity
Feminism
Food
Gender
Gender Roles: History: Anthropology: Sociology: Gender Studies
Islam
Judaism
Knowledge
Liberalism
Liberty
Middle East
Patriarchy
Protest
Rebellion
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University

Product details

  • ISBN 9780755648252
  • Weight: 1020g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 248mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the last 20 years, feminist scholars have radicalised the historiography of the Arab world. Using gendered theorisations, they have rejected the mainstream histories that prioritise ‘official’ narratives, and they have highlighted the exclusionary effect of patriarchal systems and discourses. This handbook continues their work by using ‘gender’ as a mode of analysis to produce a new cultural history of the Arab world. In doing so, it presents a new generation with ways to study the region using a 'gender lens' and establishes this approach as a field.

The five thematic parts correspond to specific areas focused on by new cultural historians: histories of practices; histories of representations; narrative sites of memory; histories of material culture; and histories of the body. Each section then provides new knowledge of the Arab world by moving away from the Western colonial gaze and focusing instead on women’s everyday experiences and lifeways. Subjects covered include: theoretical perspectives, Islamic law, protest movements and popular culture, as well as women’s autobiographies, gendered memory, food, public health and sexualities.

Edited by two pioneering feminist scholars, Hoda Elsadda and Seteney Shami, it draws together the most innovative work of other feminist scholars from across history, anthropology, literature, sociology, psychology, theology, economics, political science, law, and translation studies. The chapters demonstrate that in using gender as a category of analysis, the cultural histories of the Arab world can be rewritten to prioritise lived realities and female voices and perspectives.

Hoda Elsadda is Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Cairo University, Egypt. She previously held a Chair in the Study of the Contemporary Arab World at Manchester University, UK and was Co-Director of the Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab World in the UK. She is Co-founder of the Women and Memory Forum in Egypt (www.wmf.org.eg) and was Carnegie Visiting Scholar at Georgetown University in 2014-15. She is author of Gender, Nation and the Arabic Novel: Egypt: 1892-2008 (2012); and co-editor of Oral History in Times of Change: Gender, Documentation and the Making of Archives (2018).


Seteney Shami is founding Director-General of the Arab Council for the Social Sciences, Lebanon. She has been Visiting Professor at UC Berkeley, Georgetown University, University of Chicago and the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences. She has also been a program director at the Population Council regional office in Cairo and at the Social Science Research Council in New York. Her most recent book is Seeing the World: How U.S. Universities Make Knowledge in a Global Era (2018).