"Provides the reader with new perspectives on Mamluk women in eighteenth-century Cairo, challenging the stereotypical view of their seclusion. It does so by a reconsideration of the harem which was so central in western constructions of women in the orient. Fay offers an alternative view of these women by placing them in the context of eighteenth-century transformations and by examining these women as property owners and as founders of major pious foundations."——Nelly Hanna, American University in Cairo
"A timely and much needed challenge to the Western a historical view of the institutions of the harem and veiling among Mamluk women."—Cathlyn Mariscotti, author of Gender and Class in the Egyptian Women’s Movement, 1925–1939
Description
There is a long history in the West of representing Middle Eastern women as uniformly oppressed by Islam, by Islamic law, and by men. Stereotypical views of Middle Eastern women today maintain that they are without legal rights, do not attend universities or have jobs outside their homes, and are not full citizens of their countries because they cannot vote or hold public office. Similar misinformation circulated in the eighteenth century when European male travelers to Egypt, documenting their observations, depicted harem women as sexual objects, deprived of autonomy, and held captive by their husbands. Fay’s Unveiling the Harem offers a persuasive corrective to this distorted view of Middle Eastern women.
Instead of the odalisque of nineteenth-century painting and the fevered imaginings of European travelers, historical research reveals that elite women in powerful, wealthy households exercised their rights under Islamic law, property rights in particular, to become owners of lucrative real estate in Cairo as well as influential members of their families and the wider society. One such woman, Sitt Nafisa, who was literate in several languages, commissioned a public water fountain and a Qur’ anic school that still stands today. She played a pivotal role as the intermediary between French officials and her husband, who was leading the revolt against the French from Upper Egypt. Based on documents from various archives in Cairo, including records of women’ s property ownership, repeated visits to eighteenth-century palaces and their family quarters, and textual reconstructions of the elite residential neighborhoods of the city, Unveiling the Harem presents a lucid and historically grounded portrait of Egyptian women, stripped of the powerless victim narrative that is still with us today.
About the Author
Mary Ann Fay is associate professor of history at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Maryland. Her articles have appeared in journals such as the International Journal of Middle East Studies and the Journal of Women’s History. She is the editor of Auto/Biography and the Creation of Identity and Community in the Middle East.
Series: Middle East Studies Beyond Dominant Paradigms
6 x 9, 352 pages, 12 black and white illustrations
August 2012