Welcome to The Arab Feminist podcast where we host an open discourse on the multiple perspectives of feminism in the Arab World. I am your host, Srishti Ghosh, a freshman at Princeton University and I was inspired by a course I am studying on Global Feminisms in the Middle East to discover a little bit more about how the Islamic culture informs the conceptualization of feminism in Arab societies today. Does the framework of the Western liberal feminism effectively serve its purpose in Arab societies? Or would an indigenous expression of feminism serve the Islamic community better? And what does it really mean to be an Arab Feminist in our world? Join me in my journey of discovery to find out!
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Welcome to The Arab Feminist podcast where we host an open discourse on the multiple perspectives of feminism in the Arab World. I am your host, Srishti Ghosh, a freshman at Princeton University and I was inspired by a course I am studying on Global Feminisms in the Middle East to discover a little bit more about how the Islamic culture informs the conceptualization of feminism in Arab societies today. Does the framework of the Western liberal feminism effectively serve its purpose in Arab societies? Or would an indigenous expression of feminism serve the Islamic community better? And what does it really mean to be an Arab Feminist in our world? Join me in my journey of discovery to find out!
Coming into this project, my goal was to mould my final perspective on what kind of feminism should exist in the countries of the Middle East and North Africa based on the experiences of the women I spoke to. So for this final concluding episode, I wanted to summarize my takeaways from this experience in relation to what I have studied to date.
The Arab Feminist
Welcome to The Arab Feminist podcast where we host an open discourse on the multiple perspectives of feminism in the Arab World. I am your host, Srishti Ghosh, a freshman at Princeton University and I was inspired by a course I am studying on Global Feminisms in the Middle East to discover a little bit more about how the Islamic culture informs the conceptualization of feminism in Arab societies today. Does the framework of the Western liberal feminism effectively serve its purpose in Arab societies? Or would an indigenous expression of feminism serve the Islamic community better? And what does it really mean to be an Arab Feminist in our world? Join me in my journey of discovery to find out!