User:Mar Aeza/Sandbox 4

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Women were active participants of the nationalist mobilizations. Arab nationalism became an opportunity for women to appear in public spaces –which were traditionally reserved for men–, not only as protesters but also as founders of their own unions and organizations. One example is Hoda Sha'rawi, who marched with other women during the 1919 revolution against the British and would then create the Egyptian Feminist Union.[1] (Male) Islamic modernists Muhammad Abduh and Jamal al-Din al-Afghani, and Egyptian judge and intellectual Qasim Amine, are considered precursors of women's ideological discussion because of their reflections on their role in Islamic reforms. However, women also contributed to the intellectual foundations of the ideology by publishing articles where they made demands, such as the expansion of education, in journals dedicated to Arab history and culture.[2] Hind Nawfal established the first Arab women's magazine, Al-Fatat, in Egypt. This title became the foremother of a subsequent group of publications that came to be known as women's journals.[3]

  1. ^ Ghoussoub, Mai (1987). "Feminism –or the Eternal Masculine– in the Arab World". New Left Review. I (161): 8.
  2. ^ Anderson, A History of the Modern Middle East, p.118.
  3. ^ Hoh, Anchi (2017),Her Magazine, Her Voice: Foremothers of Women’s Journals in Africa and the Middle East