• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

Putting Texts in Context: Saudi Text Tagging


Posted by eren on 26 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



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 […]

Read more →

“Report from a Pashtun Teen” in the New York Times


Posted by azra on 25 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



After reading Nicholas Kristof and Sheryll WuDunn’s Half the Sky earlier this year, I began to frequent Kristof’s blog at the New York Times website, “On the Ground.”  While I found parts of his book lacking in portraying some of the women’s own voices (there are places where women from the developing world are portrayed […]

Read more →

Will the Real ‘Carrie Bradshaw of the Middle East’ Please Come Forward?


Posted by Guest Contributor on 24 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



This post was written by M. Lynx Qualey and originally appeared on her blog Arab Literature (in English). Last Friday, the Independent reported that poet Joumana Haddad has been called the “Carrie Bradshaw of Beirut.” Yesterday, National Public Radio said that Ghada Abdel-Aal, blogger and author of Ayza Atgowaz (now a Ramadan TV series), is […]

Read more →

A Woman Without Hijab is Like a Chair with Three Legs


Posted by nicole on 23 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



If you still haven’t figured out that wearing black chadors will save your worldly soul and that wearing lipstick and heels will get you sent to the hellfire, Iran’s “Cyber Group for Promoting Chastity and the Veil [Ifaf]” is here to clear that up for you.  They are sponsored by the Iranian government and have […]

Read more →

Friday Links — August 20, 2010


Posted by fatemeh on 20 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



On the barriers that female Shariah judges face in Malaysia. More from 50.50. Women in Kashmir are becoming a larger part of local protests against authorities. The Independent profiles Gaza’s only fisherwoman. Sakineh Ashtiani’s former lawyer speaks about her case after gaining asylum in Sweden. A Muslim woman who works at a Disneyland restaurant alleged […]

Read more →

State of the (Superhero) Nation: Faiza Hussein in British Comics


Posted by ayaan on 19 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Faiza Hussain is a British Muslim super heroine of Pakistani descent, introduced in the 2008-2009 comic series, Captain Britain and MI:13. For people who are unfamiliar with the shared universe of Marvel Comics: in 2008, there was a large scale alien invasion in the Marvel universe, and in order to reflect the international nature of […]

Read more →

Between Satire and Stereotype: Gina Dirawi


Posted by tasnim on 18 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Khadidje, Fadumah, Ruqaya, Fippan and Bettan are all characters created by blogger Gina Dirawi, a Palestinian Swede whose comic videos mocking racial and other stereotypes have become something of a sensation on the Swedish blogosphere. The following her blog has generated is large enough that she is currently blogging in affiliation with Swedish national television […]

Read more →

The Wardrobe Wars: Bikinis and Garbage Bags


Posted by sana on 17 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



About a week ago, a British woman in a Dubai shopping mall, allegedly wearing a shirt which seemed to reveal too much in relation to boobage and leggage, was scolded by a passing Emirati woman who felt the Brit’s clothing violated the modesty dress code put up by mall authorities in respect of the country’s Islamic identity and ethos (which, fortunately, do not effect the emirate’s use of slave labour for its self-glorification).

Read more →

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


Posted by Guest Contributor on 16 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



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 […]

Read more →

Friday Links — August 13, 2010


Posted by fatemeh on 13 Aug 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



A new study says that pregnant women shouldn’t fast. More from The Huffington Post. Yasmin Sajid Sheikh of India aspires to be a policewoman and a role model for “progressive Muslim women.” Campaigning against stoning is still necessary. This is a much better way to address matches with the Iranian women’s soccer team. Take note, […]

Read more →
« First‹ Previous129130131132133134135136137Next ›Last »
  • Find us on Facebook

  • Recent Posts

    • Film Review: 3 Seconds Divorce
    • The Intersections of Latinx Identities, Islam and Gendered Narratives
    • Book Review: The Tower by Shereen Malherbe
    • Taking Back the Narrative, One Panel at a Time
    • No Country For Travelling Women
  • Recent Comments

    • Mynaijabaze on Remembering Siti on Ramadan
    • Faye on Ramadan ~ Maybe Next Year
    • Shawn Smith on Ramadan ~ Maybe Next Year
    • aziza shaikh on Remembering the Quebec City Mosque Shooting, One Year Later
    • Mohammad shakoor on Saints and Misfits and Everything in Between
  • Authors

    Powered by Authors Widget
  • Archives

  • Categories