Note! Looking for an order placed before 2025-09-20, 16:00? [Click Here]
السبت - 1447 12 ربيع الآخر
{"Id":0,"Name":null,"Mobile":null,"Email":null,"Token":null,"Type":0,"ReferencerId":null,"VatConfirm":false,"PublicToken":null,"Culture":"ar-sa","Currency":"sek","CurrencySign":"SEK","CountryIsoCode":"us","HasSubset":false,"Discount":0.0,"IsProfileComplete":false,"HasCredit":false,"LastActivity":"0001-01-01T00:00:00"}
login
تسجيل الدخول
shopping cart 0
السلة

السلة

المجموع
0  
ContinuetoCheckout

Menu

معلومات المنتج
 ISBN رقم: 9780863560828
الناشر: Saqi Books
الفئة العمرية: البالغون
الصفحات: 232
الوزن: 320 g
غلاف الكتاب: کتب کرتونیه للأطفال
Subjects:

الإنجليزية 1988

Woman against her Sex: a Critique of El-Saadawi

المؤلف: Georges Tabishi
التقييم:
244 SEK
موجود - 1 إلی 2 یوم
قائمة الأمنيات
Wishlist
معلومات المنتج
 ISBN رقم: 9780863560828
الناشر: Saqi Books
الفئة العمرية: البالغون
الصفحات: 232
الوزن: 320 g
غلاف الكتاب: کتب کرتونیه للأطفال
This is a provocative critique of the work of the Egyptian feminist Nawal el-Saadawi. Tarabishi argues that the heroines of her novels, far from being shining examples of liberated womanhood, have unconsciously absorbed a male ideology that actually works against the interest of women. Their revolt is not, he claims, the result of their oppresssion by men, but of their connivance with their oppressor and their acceptance of his view of the world. Saadawi's heroines are accused of elitism. These doctors, lawyers and medical students, shunning the worl of ordinary women, show a distinct lack of solidarity with their sex. They are not, as they claim, fighting a society which oppresses them, but, in reacting against the very fact of being women, are struggling against nature. Tarabishi proclaims that he is defending feminism against its false friends. In a spirited reply, Saadawi counters that his critique is based on a rigid and outmoded Freudian analysis.
more
This is a provocative critique of the work of the Egyptian feminist Nawal el-Saadawi. Tarabishi argues that the heroines of her novels, far from being shining examples of liberated womanhood, have unconsciously absorbed a male ideology that actually works against the interest of women. Their revolt is not, he claims, the result of their oppresssion by men, but of their connivance with their oppressor and their acceptance of his view of the world. Saadawi's heroines are accused of elitism. These doctors, lawyers and medical students, shunning the worl of ordinary women, show a distinct lack of solidarity with their sex. They are not, as they claim, fighting a society which oppresses them, but, in reacting against the very fact of being women, are struggling against nature. Tarabishi proclaims that he is defending feminism against its false friends. In a spirited reply, Saadawi counters that his critique is based on a rigid and outmoded Freudian analysis.
more