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001        CVU0000036_00001
005        20200703073243.0
006        m^^^^^o^^d^^^^^^^^
007        cr^^n^---ma^mp
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040        |a UkLSOA |c UkLSOA
245 00 |a Interview with Mai Saleh |h [electronic resource] |y English.
246 3    |a مقابلة مع مي صالح |y Arabic.
260        |c 2013.
490        |a Middle East Women's Activism.
500        |a Funding : Women's Activism in the Arab World (2013-2016). This project, funded by a British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship, examines the significance of middle-class women's activism to the geo/politics of Arab countries, from national independence until the Arab uprisings. It was based on over 100 personal narratives of women activists of different generations from Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon.
500        |a Interview conducted on: 25 December 2013
500        |a Duration: 1 hour, 26 minutes and 40 seconds
500        |a Language of interview: Arabic
500        |a Audio transcription by Captivate Arabia, Amman, Jordan , info@captivatearabia.com
500        |a آسيا -- مصر -- القاهرة -- القاهرة
500        |a VIAF (name authority) : Pratt, Nicola Christine : URI http://viaf.org/viaf/49147457
506        |a © 2013 the Interviewer and Interviewee. All rights reserved. Used here with permission.
520 3    |a Mai was on 12 August, 1982, in Cairo. She grew up in Shoubra. Her mother was a factory worker and her father was an accountant. She went to Ayn Shams University, studying libraries and information. When she was at university she became politically active, joining the student council and regularly opposing the dean and the security forces at university. After graduating, she first worked in public schools, then in an environmental rights office and finally joined the New Woman Foundation where she worked on the Women and Work campaign which highlighted discriminatory employment practices. Before the revolution, she also helped to form the Young Arab Women Network and the Conference of Civil Society Young Activists. Mai participated in the revolution, going to protests both against Mubarak and later against Morsi and the Muslim Brotherhood. She was inspired to join the revolution after witnessing iolence against women, female objectification in the media and police torture. At the time of the interview, she believed that the aims pf the revolution needed to expand into civil society and fight against the traditions of Egyptian society that continue to oppress and violate women and their rights. She was worried that focusing too much on the political aspects of the revolution would leave cultural matters to Islamist and conservative groups who want to maintain women's subjugation.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |b London : |c SOAS University of London, |c University of Warwick, |d 2020. |f (SOAS Digital Collections) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
650    0 |a Persian Gulf War (1991).
650    7 |a New Woman Foundation. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Muʼassasat al-Marʼah al-Jadīdah (Egypt).
650    7 |a مؤسسة المرأة الجديدة (مصر). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Women and Work. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Labour movement. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Young Women's Forum. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a منتدى الشابات. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Violence against women. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Women -- Violence against.
650    7 |a Said, Khalid, 1982-2010. |2 DNB
650    7 |a مقتل خالد سعيد، 1982-2010. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Police torture. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Thawrat 25 Yanāyir 2011 (Egypt). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Mohammad Mahmoud Street (Cairo, Egypt). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a جرافيتى شارع محمد محمود (القاهرة، مصر). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a جداريات محمد محمود (القاهرة، مصر). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Thawrat 25 Yanāyir 2011 (Egypt). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a ثورة 25 ياناير 2011 (مصر). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Oriental society. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Violence.
650    0 |a Durrah, Muḥammad.
650    7 |a درة، محمد. |2 J9U
650    7 |a Young Arab Women Network. |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a شبكة الشابات العربيات. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Freedom of association.
650    0 |a Civil society.
650    7 |a Gender roles. |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Sex roles.
650    0 |a Sexual harassment.
650    7 |a Invisible work (Egypt). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a Revolt against ourselves (Egypt). |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Social security.
650    0 |a Housewives.
650    7 |a Protests (Egypt : 2013 June 30). |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Protests (Egypt : 2011-2013).
650    7 |a Muslim Brotherhood (Egypt). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a جمعيات الإخوان المسلمين (مصر). |2 UW-MEWA
650    7 |a December 2012 protests at Al-Ittihadiya (Presidential Palace). |2 UW-MEWA
650    0 |a Capitalism.
720 1    |a Saleh, Mai. |4 ive
720        |a صالح ، مي. |4 ctb
720 1    |a Pratt, Nicola Christine. |4 ctb
752        |a Egypt |b Cairo Governate |d Cairo.
830    0 |a SOAS Digital Collections.
830    0 |a Middle East Women’s Activism.
830    0 |a Egypt Collection.
852        |a GBR |b SDC |c Middle East Women’s Activism
856 40 |u http://digital.soas.ac.uk/CVU0000036/00001 |y Click here for full text
992 04 |a http://digital.soas.ac.uk/content/CV/U0/00/00/36/00001/CVU0000036thm.jpg
997        |a Middle East Women’s Activism


The record above was auto-generated from the METS file.