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Women

Thumbnail illustration of a woman riding a bicycle
Review

Emory Women Writers Resource Project

The subjects covered are diverse and include commentaries on such topics as nature, native-white relations, emancipation, imperialism, social and sexual mores, wet nursing, Christianity, and women’s suffrage.
Painting thumbnail of a man and his cows in the countryside
Review

Louisa's World

[Instructors] might invite students to reconstruct Collins’s expectations and attitudes towards various topics, tracing perspectives that she noted as exceptional.
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Bhakti Poets: Poem, Bahinabai

Bhakti poets—who were in some cases lower-caste Hindu women—and their audiences drew emotional sustenance from these verses, which expressed a pure devotion to Hindu deities.

Thumbnail image of a stained glass window
Review

Mapping Margery Kempe: A Guide to Late Medieval Material and Spiritual Life

This website is a collection of resources, particularly strong in visual content, that examines the social context in which Kempe produced her narrative.
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Imperialism in North Africa: Personal Account, A Visit to Tunisian Harem

The harem (or harim) has exercised a powerful fascination over the Western imagination for centuries.

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Imperialism in North Africa: Autobiography, Leila Abouzeid

In Morocco, after 1912, the colonial regime eschewed, for the most part, introducing overt changes into Islamic personal status law.

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Imperialism in North Africa: Song, Amina Annabi

North African women have long, rich traditions of vocal and instrumental music. At weddings and other joyous occasions, including religious celebrations, female musicians sing, perform, and dance.

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Imperialism in North Africa: Personal Account, Captain Carette

To the east of Algiers is a rugged mountainous region, the Kabylia, whose loftiest peak is named after a holy woman, Lalla Khadija.

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Dona Marina, Cortes’ Translator: Poem, La Malinche

A well-known Chicana poem about Malinche. Tafolla took inspiration from the famous 1967 poem of the Chicano movement, “Yo Soy Joaquín,” but rewrites from an explicitly feminist perspective.

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Dona Marina, Cortes’ Translator: Poem, Como Duele, 1993, Women in World History

One of the earliest meditations on Malinche and her meaning published by a Chicana in the United States. This narrative explores Malinche’s fate and her abilities to negotiate difficult and competing cultural demands.