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Technology/Science

A Computer and a Webcam: Finding Muslim Love and Long-Distance Relationships in a Globalized World


Posted by eren on 03 Feb 2014 / 1 Comment
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With Valentine’s Day coming up, I have found myself wondering about relationships, dating and marriage. As a woman that has been in a long distance relationship for numerous years, big heart-shaped balloons, teddy bears and red roses are not part of my life. However, after joining grad school I noticed that I am not the […]

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Cinema

Film Review: Solar Mamas


Posted by woodturtle on 12 Nov 2012 / 0 Comments
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Last week, PBS aired the premiere of Solar Mamas, an inspiring documentary of one woman’s journey to transform her life after being offered the opportunity to become a solar-energy engineer. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oGMgHZ1WzxA Rafea Ehnad is a 32-year-old mother, and a second wife to an unemployed husband; she lives in one of Jordan’s poorest desert villages. With […]

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Culture/Society

Apple and its Islamophobic Thesaurus


Posted by Guest Contributor on 10 Jul 2012 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by guest contributor Arwa Aburawa. About a week ago, I was sitting in a cafe talking to a new acquaintance about racism. The person in question had worked on issues of race and racism for some time and I would say is a lot more clued up about the tensions and […]

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Women in the 2011 Arab Media Forum


Posted by samya on 24 May 2011 / 0 Comments
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There was something quite exciting about this year’s Arab Media Forum (AMF), which recently concluded in Dubai and was attended by over 2,000 media leaders from around the region. This year marked the tenth anniversary of the forum, which has served as an annual platform for debating Arab media issues and concerns for the past […]

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Shutting Down Misconceptions about Clothing & Culture’s Effect on Breast Cancer


Posted by azra on 23 May 2011 / 0 Comments
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Earlier this month, Ms. Magazine ran an article that looked at breast cancer stigma in Saudi Arabia.  The article provides breast cancer statistics in Saudi Arabia (without citation or link), breast cancer statistics in the United States, and American expat Carol Fleming’s experience with breast cancer in Saudi Arabia. Fleming suggests that promoting pink products […]

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Simply Everything: An Interview with Imane Khachani


Posted by fatemeh on 06 Apr 2011 / 0 Comments
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This was written by Chally and originally published at Feministe. Last month, Women Deliver – a fantastic organisation dedicated to improving women’s and girls’ health and wellbeing globally – released the Women Deliver 100. It’s a list of inspiring people, well, delivering for girls and women in all kinds of areas: health, politics, the media, […]

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Increasing Muslim Women’s Significance through Mediatization, Part II


Posted by emanhashim on 15 Dec 2010 / 0 Comments
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Yesterday, I went over the presentations at the NVIC conference “Female Actors in the Egyptian Islamic Public Sphere-Increasing Significance through Increasing Mediatization;” today, I’ll cover the speakers’ day. Four female speakers were invited, representing different messages and perspectives. The speakers were Dalia Younis, a final year medical student who is the moderator for her mother’s […]

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Increasing Muslim Women’s Significance through Mediatization, Part I


Posted by emanhashim on 14 Dec 2010 / 0 Comments
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A very interesting workshop was organized on November 24-25 by the Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo (NVIC) titled: “Female Actors in Islamic Public Sphere – Increasing Significance through Increasing Mediatization.” This was a great conference, and I wish I could recap it all for you. But I’ll keep my review to the media-related panels. Maria Roeder […]

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Putting Texts in Context: Saudi Text Tagging


Posted by eren on 26 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
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Earlier this month, CNN Expansión reported that the Saudi government aimed to prohibit the Blackberry Messenger service, since it is considered a threat to national security because the service doesn’t allow the government to intercept messages. Blackberry has become very popular among single young people, who use it as a way to connect with men […]

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Nothing is worse for a Saudi man than imagining himself a woman


Posted by Guest Contributor on 16 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
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This post was written by Eman Al Nafjan and originally appeared at her blog Saudiwoman’s Weblog. Every Ramadan for the past sixteen years a show called Tash Ma Tash, which means something in the literal lines of “splash what may,” is closely watched by almost every Saudi household. The show is a satire of Saudi […]

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