Daughter of Isis traces how a childhood shaped by patriarchy becomes the ground for a lifelong struggle against silence and control. Nawal Saadawi’s autobiography shows that what begins as the quiet awareness of unequal freedoms – between brothers and sisters, men and women – grows into a defiant refusal to accept injustice as natural order. Her book reveals how personal wounds inflicted by tradition and authority are transformed into a political consciousness, where resisting silence becomes inseparable from challenging the systems that enforce it.

The Asymmetry of Change: Gender Roles in Transition
This article examines the historical evolution of gender roles, highlighting how women’s rapid adaptation to new social, political, and economic realities contrasted with men’s slower transformations, producing a clear imbalance that continues to shape identity, relationships, and cultural expectations.

In a world still shaped by patriarchal structures, Simone de Beauvoir’s work remains revolutionary. This article explores how she exposed the architecture of oppression, challenged gender myths, and gave women a philosophical vocabulary to claim freedom and agency. From The Second Sex to her existential insights, Beauvoir’s legacy reshapes how we understand gender, power, and social structures.
Justice Made Visible
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