ID | 181090 |
Title Proper | Barbaric Women |
Other Title Information | Race and the Colonization of Gender in Interwar Egypt |
Language | ENG |
Author | Takla, Nefertiti |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article analyzes the sensationalized media coverage of a serial murder case during the Egyptian revolution of the early interwar era. Despite conflicting evidence, the media blamed the murders on two sisters from southern Egypt named Raya and Sakina. Through a close reading of Egyptian editorials and news reports, I argue that middle-class nationalists constructed Raya and Sakina as barbaric women who threatened to pull the nation back in time in order to legitimize their claim to power. Borrowing from Ann Stoler's analysis of the relationship between race and sexuality and Maria Lugones's concept of the modern/colonial gender system, this article maintains that race was as central to nationalist conceptions of female barbarism as gender, sexuality, and class. The enduring depiction of Raya and Sakina as the quintessential barbaric Egyptian women symbolizes the way in which the modern woman was constructed at the intersection of race and sexuality. |
`In' analytical Note | International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 53, No.3; Aug 2021: p.387 - 405 |
Journal Source | International Journal of Middle East Studies 2021-09 53, 3 |
Key Words | Crime ; Race ; Egypt ; Prostitution ; Gender ; Sexuality ; Upper Egypt |