by Margot Badran (Editor), Miriam Cooke (Author)
Praise for the first edition:
An impressive collection of more than 50 pieces-essays, poems, folktales, short stories, memoirs, film scripts, lectures/speeches-by Arab women challenging the widely accepted view of Middle Eastern women as submissive non-thinkers to whom feminism is a foreign concept. -Booklist
Anyone interested in good writing should read [Opening the Gates]. Here are first-class stories with the energy and freshness we expect from a beginning. -Doris Lessing, The Independent
This collection of stories, speeches, essays, poems and memoirs bears fierce testimony to a tradition of brave Arab feminist writing in the face of subjugation by a Muslim patriarchy. -Publishers Weekly
This impressive collection of writings by Arab women... represent[s] a powerful series of vignettes by women who were both insightful and gifted, into the lives of women who have lived 'behind the veil' over the last 100 years. -Arab Book World
An expression of indigenous, intrepid feminism in the Arab world. -Ms.
Opening the Gates succeeds not because of its methodology, but because of the stories the women tell. -Voice Literary Supplement
Format: Paperback
Pages: 512
Edition: 2nd Revised edition
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Published: 01 Sep 2004
ISBN 10: 0253217032
ISBN 13: 9780253217035
Book Overview: 2005 AAUP Public & Secondary School LibrarySelection
Margot Badran is Edith Kreeger Wolf Distinguished Visiting Professor of Religion and Preceptor at the Institute for the Study of Islamic Thought in Africa at Northwestern University. Her books include Feminists, Islam, and Nation: Gender and the Making of Modern Egypt, as well as Harem Years: The Memoirs of an Egyptian Feminist: Huda Shaarawi, which she translated, edited, and introduced. Her permanent residence is in Cairo, Egypt.
miriam cooke is Professor of Arabic Literature and Culture and Chair of the Department of Asian and African Languages and Literature at Duke University. Among her publications are War's Other Voices: Women Writers on the Lebanese Civil War; Women and the War Story; Women Claim Islam: Creating Islamic Feminism through Literature; and a novel, Hayati, My Life. She lives in Durham, North Carolina.