Andrea, Bernardette. The Lives of Girls and Women from the Islamic World in Early Modern British Literatre and Culture. University of Toronto Press.
43
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Rosita Forbes | Her parents, she said (who were both members of the land-owning class, though in her father's case with strong egalitarian sympathies), had such a sensitive awareness of the next world that the permissible conveniences of... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Rosita Forbes | RF
nevertheless argued that the Senussi in general, and Emir Sidi Idris
in particular, were not necessarily hostile to the British: they were merchants; they had found that moving skins and ivory abroad for sale... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Rosita Forbes | Forbes's interviewee, a brigand and a powerful political manager in Morocco (which was currently a Spanish protectorate), masterminded more than one strategic kidnapping of a westerner. She preserves the biblical flavour which El Raisuni
's... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Rosita Forbes | RF
sets out with a brisk account of the 675 Indian princely States, which involves her in a summary of Indian history and some speculation about the future. The various strands in her political thinking... |
politics | Mary Fisher | |
Textual Production | Queen Elizabeth I | As monarch, she maintained a remarkably wide-ranging correspondence. She wrote her first letter to a Muslim
sovereign, the Great Sophie of Persia (the Savafid emperor), in 1561. Andrea, Bernardette. The Lives of Girls and Women from the Islamic World in Early Modern British Literatre and Culture. University of Toronto Press. 43 |
Textual Production | Nawal El Saadawi | |
Textual Features | May Crommelin | |
politics | Mary Carpenter | MC
was impartially critical of various Hindu
, Muslim
, and Parsi
practices, but realised that her reforms had to proceed without attempting to convert Indian women from their religion. She was convinced that Christianity |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Jessie Ellen Cadell | The article contains two linked analyses, of FitzGerald
as a translator and of Omar
as a thinker. She calls the former's rendering a poem on Omar, rather than a translation of his work, and points... |
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