Women in Lebanon

Women in Lebanon
Author: M. Thomas
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2012-12-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781137281999

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Combining insider and outsider perspectives, Women in Lebanon looks at Christian and Muslim women living together in a multicultural society and facing modernity. While the Arab Spring has begun to draw attention to issues of change, modernity, and women's subjectivity, this manuscript takes a unique approach to examining and describing the Lebanese "alternative modernities" thesis and how it has shaped thinking about the meaning of terms like evolution, progress, development, history, and politics in contemporary Arab thought. The author draws on extensive ethnographic research, as well as her own personal experience.

Women and Gender in a Lebanese Village

Women and Gender in a Lebanese Village
Author: Nancy W. Jabbra
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 197
Release: 2021-04-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9789004459618

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In Women and Gender in a Lebanese Village: Generations of Change, Nancy W. Jabbra presents a detailed analysis of change in gender roles in a Christian community in rural Lebanon.

Remember Me To Lebanon

Remember Me To Lebanon
Author: Evelyn Shakir
Publsiher: Syracuse University Press
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2015-02-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780815608769

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Evelyn C. Shakir paints tales that are rich in history and background. She sets her stories in different eras, from the 1960s to the present, peopled with Lebanese women of different ages, sometimes writing letters, often reminiscing, looking back as far as the turn of the century. In different ways, these first and second-generation women struggle with feminist issues overshadowed by the demands of dual cultures. In Young Ali a teenager tries to listen to her beloved father’s time-honored tales of males in friendship and marriage. Aggie of House Calls is a deceased matriarch who returns to haunt her family with reminders of the customs she fought to uphold while alive. Shakir’s other heroines include a thrice-divorced thirty-year-old woman quibbling with a modern matchmaker, an elderly non-Lebanese woman who spies on Muslim neighbors in the wake of 9/11, and a traditional wife and mother who thinks she has found a route out of Old World womanly duties. Many of the authors’s women grapple with reclaiming or abandoning ancestral demands, and finessing age-old male-female relationships. In Oh, Lebanon a war-haunted Lebanese-born woman willfully departs from the mores of her upbringing, with surprising results. With agile humor and emotional truth, Shakir offers multiple perspectives on Lebanese women trying to change roles in a new landscape without surrendering cultural identity.

Lebanese Women at the Crossroads

Lebanese Women at the Crossroads
Author: Nelia Hyndman-Rizk
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 171
Release: 2020-01-22
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781498522755

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Thirty years after the end of the civil war, Lebanese women are still struggling for gender equality. This study builds on recent scholarship on women’s activism in the Arab world, in the context of the Arab Spring. It examines how discourses of secularism and equal civil rights have informed the contemporary Lebanese women’s movement in their campaigns for a domestic violence law, women’s nationality rights, a women’s quota in parliament, the reform of personal status law and the recognition of civil marriage. This book argues that women are caught between sect and nation, due to Lebanon’s plural legal system, which makes a division between religious and civil law. While both jurisdictions allocate women relational rights, guided by the logic of patrilineal descent, women’s inequality is central to the reproduction of sectarian difference and patriarchal control within the confessional political system, as a whole.

Lebanon Women in Culture Business Travel

Lebanon Women in Culture  Business   Travel
Author: World Trade Press
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 7
Release: 2010
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OCLC:966163616

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Women s War Stories

Women   s War Stories
Author: Michelle Hartman,Malek Abisaab
Publsiher: Syracuse University Press
Total Pages: 217
Release: 2022-09-09
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780815655664

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Women have consistently been left out of the official writing of Lebanese history, and nowhere is this more obvious than in writing on the Lebanese Civil War. As more and more histories of the war begin to circulate, few include any in-depth discussion of the multiple roles women played in wartime Lebanon. Fewer still address the essential issues of women’s work and their creative production, such as literature, performance art, and filmmaking. Developed out of a larger oral history project collecting and archiving the ways in which women narrated their experiences of the Lebanese Civil War, this book focuses on a wide range of subjects, all framed as women telling their "war stories." Each of the six chapters centers on women who worked or created art during the war, revealing, in their own words, the challenges, struggles, and resistance they faced during this tumultuous period of Lebanese history.

Status of Women in Lebanon

Status of Women in Lebanon
Author: Young Women's Christian Associations
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 72
Release: 1951
Genre: Women
ISBN: STANFORD:36105073346319

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Embodying Geopolitics

Embodying Geopolitics
Author: Nicola Pratt
Publsiher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 327
Release: 2020-10-27
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780520281769

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When women took to the streets during the mass protests of the Arab Spring, the subject of feminism in the Middle East and North Africa returned to the international spotlight. In the subsequent years, countless commentators treated the region’s gender inequality as a consequence of fundamentally cultural or religious problems. In so doing, they overlooked the specifically political nature of these women’s activism. Moving beyond such culturalist accounts, this book turns to the relations of power in regional and international politics to understand women’s struggles for their rights. Based on over a hundred extensive personal narratives from women of different generations in Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon, Nicola Pratt traces women’s activism from national independence through to the Arab uprisings, arguing that activist women are critical geopolitical actors. Weaving together these personal accounts with the ongoing legacies of colonialism, Embodying Geopolitics demonstrates how the production and regulation of gender is integrally bound up with the exercise and organization of geopolitical power, with consequences for women’s activism and its effects.