Research Article

Feminine Re-Narrating the Nation in Nawal El Saadawi’s: A Daughter of Isis

Authors

  • Salma Bartiza Assistant Professor of English Studies and Literature at the Polydisciplinary Faculty of Safi, Cadi Ayyad University, Morocco

Abstract

This study introduces a postcolonial feminist analysis of Nawal El Saadawi's A Daughter of Isis, focusing on the lived experiences of Egyptian women within the intersections of gender, colonialism, and religion. It examines how patriarchal structures and colonial legacies collectively shape women's roles and identities in Egyptian society. Central to this analysis is El Saadawi's challenge of oppressive cultural and religious traditions, including female genital mutilation and gender-restrictive roles, highlighting women's resistance against systemic inequities. The study explores the strategies employed by women to assert their agency and reshape narratives of national and personal identity amidst patriarchal dominance. Additionally, it critiques El Saadawi's use of autobiography as a tool for resistance, emphasizing the re-narration of history through marginalized voices. By intertwining personal memory with broader socio-political critique, El Saadawi reclaims women's voices, offering a nuanced perspective on identity formation and the quest for justice in a postcolonial context.

Article information

Journal

International Journal of Arts and Humanities Studies

Volume (Issue)

4 (4)

Pages

46-63

Published

2024-12-18

How to Cite

Salma Bartiza. (2024). Feminine Re-Narrating the Nation in Nawal El Saadawi’s: A Daughter of Isis. International Journal of Arts and Humanities Studies, 4(4), 46-63. https://doi.org/10.32996/Ijahs.2024.4.4.7

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Keywords:

Postcolonial feminism , Egyptian women's experiences , Patriarchy and resistance, Gender and power, Autobiography as resistance