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Sex and the Citadel: Intimate Life in a Changing Arab World

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384 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2013

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About the author

Shereen El Feki

6 books37 followers
Shereen El Feki is a British journalist. She was born to a Welsh mother and an Egyptian father.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 166 reviews
Profile Image for John Anthony.
942 reviews166 followers
August 20, 2024
Journalism at its best from a woman with a Welsh mother and an Egyptian father. I was engrossed throughout and full of admiration for the writer.

Interesting to reflect with her on the cyclical changes within the worlds of Christianity and Islam. When one was more relaxed/liberal in its interpretation of sexual morality the other tended to be more repressive. The scriptures of Islam and Judaism/Christianity are open to so many interpretations, as are the laws around us.

East and West are not one entity – they may appear to want similar things but within very different contexts: freedoms and equalities, perhaps but within their own particular systems. As the author says towards the end of her book:

“..sexual rights can be realised and exercised, in an Islamic framework, so long as individuals have the freedom to think, and act, for themselves. Religion is not black and white, as conservatives would have us believe; on sex, as with so many matters in life, Islam offers at least fifty shades of grey”.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
116 reviews3 followers
June 26, 2013
I listened to Shereen El-Feki being interviewed on Fresh Air a few months ago and immediately put my name on the library waiting list that already had developed for this book. Sex and gender relations within the Arab/Muslim world has been sort of my pet academic interest during college, and I was INCREDIBLY excited to read a nuanced survey of the subject, especially post the Arab Spring.

I wasn't disappointed by the book at all. El-Feki's interviews are taking place during a unique time of upheaval in Egypt and the Arab world at large and capture the diverse opinions of individuals throughout the Arab world. Her thesis is somewhat subtle, but revolutionary: that the political uprisings of the Arab Spring are intrinsically linked to a longer and more intimate kind of a revolution, sustained assault on "traditional" sex and gender norms. However, with the rise in power of conservative Islamists, it doesn't necessary follow that this sexual revolution will be successful and even if it is, it may not adhere to Western notions of what a successful sexual revolution would look like. Whatever the endpoint may be, El-Feki makes a convincing case that Arab society is in for a period of sustained change.
Profile Image for Fadi زغموت.
Author 10 books431 followers
September 15, 2014
It is a great book that covers all aspects of the sexuality of the Arab world. It is pretty much comprehensive and says what is needed to be said. Shereen's writing style is entertaining, she is eloquent and precise, which makes the reading experience more rewarding.

It is sad that there is no Arabic edition of this book that it out yet. This is a much needed discourse in the Arab world. Hope it picks up in the Arab world, where it is needed mostly.
Profile Image for Karen.s.
260 reviews16 followers
April 12, 2013
Shereen Feki, the daughter of an Egyptian man and a Welsh mother, looks at the connection between the expression of sexuality and the pursuit of freedom in general. She argues that Muslims were not always so sexually suppressed as they are today, but that the tyranny of dictatorship has used sexual repression within the patriarchal Middle Eastern societies as the most powerful tool of general suppression in their regimes. With all the changes that Middle Eastern societies have been going through in the Arab Spring uprisings, Feki wanted to see what changes, if any, are taking place in regards to sexuality. She looks at women's sexual rights, the importance of virginity, sex workers, homosexuality and transgender. She concentrates mostly on Egypt, but looks at some issues in Morocco, Lebanon and Tunisia as well.

Feki was born and raised in Canada, but spent summers with her relatives in Egypt. In a way, this book is an attempt to understand her roots and get to know her relatives better. These parts, where she has real discussions with friends and relatives are most interesting and revealing. She also talks to famous feminists, activists, authors and film makers, and while these people often provide the most shocking information, the tone is different than talking to family. I found it a little jarring. On the other hand, I was inspired and genuinely happy to know about these stereotype busting women. My personal reading list has a few more titles added to it.

This book is meant to be read by the general public and thus does not employ academic language. I would call it "kicky". The language is easily accessible and she occasionally uses crude words and makes jokes. However, the content of the book is scholarly. At times I felt there was an attempt being made to make the book more appealing to the reader by quoting extended passages from explicit texts that bordered on sensationalizing. Feki's point is to show how uninhibited Arabs and Muslims used to be, but one or two references would have been enough. If you are looking for a more scholarly take on the same material, albeit describing Egypt in the 70s, read Nawal Sadaawi's "The Faces of Eve". The last chapter of the book contains suggestions of plans of action that Feki, as an employee of the World Health Organization, would like to pursue. It reads like a position paper presented to such an organization. It's not that there's anything wrong with that, but it was such a shift from the tones previously used.

I do think the topic is a worthy one for discussion and I would like to see more books on this subject looking at the situation in Saudi Arabia or the Gulf states or the Arabs living in Israel. I would recommend the book for anyone who is interested and hasn't read anything on the subject.






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Profile Image for Moataz.
179 reviews64 followers
September 18, 2019
Wonderful. It is very hard to read from a foreigner a coherent and close-to-reality book (yes, she is a foreigner.) Somehow she managed to literally, almost-perfectly portray the Egyptian reality, on all aspects. I'm saying a foreigner, not just because she doesn't speak Arabic well or because she wasn’t raised in Egypt. I'm saying she's for two reasons 1. When she attempts to explain an egyptian myth, it was sadly obvious, she doesn’t know what she’s talking about. But not in a laughable way like when white people do. 2. She doesn’t know the line between what Egyptians widespreadly believes and what a single person may believe. When zizi says that only Christians make black magic, don’t assume it's a fact or even that all Egyptians believe and know this, and thus Egyptians are Christianophobics! In my grandmother’s village, a man - a Sheikh, actually - was being chased because he’s a black magic sorcerer. Actually, what’s true is that Muslims would prefer going to a Muslim sorcerer than a Christian. So yes, Egyptians are Christianophobics, but not the way it’s mentioned.

If El Feki was raised in Egypt, she would have realized long ago that sometimes Egyptians believed in things with no evidence, or reason, or hidden motives, or sense. They are hypocrites, confused, and ignorant, and along with what she said unbelievably ‘'Egoistical'’. There's no logic or reason to communicate with. No context or explanation whatsoever. The issue I take against the author is that she doesn’t present her own interpretation as an attempt to explain. She’s presenting it as a reality - the actual reason why they think this or that! When it comes to women and human rights, Egyptians have no conscious. Reason or 'common sense' and consciousness are like muscles, when you don't use muscle, it gets weaker and weaker. It doesn't mean they're inherently evil. No, they have been beaten down and oppressed and their education and health are degraded, for so long. The Egyptian mind and heart is weakened by long years of corruption and getting used to horrors and chaos and absence of order or common sense as day-to-day life! And it is the only life we know, except for a few I hope, and the only way we can live.


The book is familiar, but it often drops bullshit that I have no idea where the author got it from. Like the story of spies with belts to neuter Egyptian men. That's total bullshit. And it angered me because it wasn't referenced to a specific storyteller or a reference the author got the story from. Egyptians are stupid and believe in stupid things. Just tell the true stupidity. Don't make up shit, Mrs. El Feki!! Again, like with the christianophobia, I’m not saying they don’t believe in absurd stuff. I’m just saying that nobody believes this obviously made up shit! We don't call a childless woman maskiina. That's also bullshit. It's not "a thing". The word is an adjective that people actually rarely use, and that's even funnier! A man who lost his wife, or kids, or a father, could also be called "maskiin he just lost his ...". That's a phrase, but again, as Chandler Bing say it "Nobody talks like that!"

The dare to be different is my favorite chapter in the book, and the author should have added to it: Egyptians thinks that same-sex relationships will destroy family values. Egyptians don't know they actually take all the credit for that.
Profile Image for Elaine.
963 reviews487 followers
June 14, 2015
A good background for anyone who wants to know more about women's lives in Egypt. Though the book takes on the overwhelming task of sex in the Arab wold, Egypt is where we spend most of our time and the side trips to other countries are basically flyovers. Will go into more detail later - I think though I rated this book a 3 rather than a 4 as I would have liked to hear more personal narratives and in- depth focus on any of the fascinating topics the book covers, but that is my idiosyncrasy. There is also the sad fact that El Feki looks so much to the Egyptian Spring as a chance for change for women and for more openness in society generally but we know how that has ended, at least for now.
Profile Image for Wilbur.
381 reviews8 followers
May 28, 2013
A well intentioned work. More appropriate if it were condensed and published as an extensive article, not really book length. Frequently repetitive and tedious.
Profile Image for Lyana Khairuddin.
95 reviews27 followers
April 17, 2015
Sheeren El Feki got there first!!!

That was my first thought after about a quarter into the book. This was the book I wanted to write about my own experience of next to no sexual education in Malaysia to being a researcher in HPV and now HIV- two sexually transmitted viruses, and the former being so close to women that I am appalled at the fact that I only knew of it when I was studying to write my PhD proposal at the ripe old age of 23. I found similarities between Sheeren and myself, she being an Immunologist before working as a journalist for The Economist, working closely with UNAIDS and well-read in HIV. The fact that she was brought up as third culture kid, however, was our difference- I grew up much like many of the subjects in the book- conservative, family-first and my parents were born-again Muslims; ensuring the double-stigma of culture and religion towards the already taboo subject of sex.

All of that aside, for as a reader one reads based on one's own experiences- the book is articulate, well-researched (the notes and references takes about a quarter of the thickness!- and one that makes us all glad for researchers who have done their homework first), and presents arguments with a researcher's viewpoint of qualitative and quantitative data- almost neutral, and allowing the data to speak for itself. Nonetheless, like all closing paragraphs to summarise any scientific publication- the last chapter presents the author's own summary of the issue and the hope for future work that can be done.

I guess us scientists are all molded from similar templates after all.

I also can't help but feel a sense of familiarity with the situations described in Egypt and the Arab world- almost as if Malaysia is heading towards the same direction if we are not there already. This book used "sex" as a topic to discuss a bigger psychosocial analysis of religion, society and culture; something us HIV scientists will be familiar with- for we cannot talk about the transmission or research towards a cure or vaccination without talking about behaviour and ideologies. While the book focusses heavily on sexuality- there are only a few chapters solely dedicated to men who have sex with men, lesbians and transgenders. The primary focus of the book dissects the culture of marriage- from expectations, family, reproduction, to sex of course; and mainly on the effects of a patriarchal culture on women in general.

The chapters tend to get a bit technical and anecdotal; but almost always will begin or injected with humourous stories, for I guess in most cultures, when talking about something that is taboo, making jokes of it is the first step towards our freedom to express and to start a discourse. Ah satire, how some people can take such a skewed view towards you!

This book should be considered a thesis. And for that, I thank Shereen El Feki for writing it and I am jealous that she had the idea first!

Oh well, I guess I just need to find my own book to write. :)

Nonetheless, a good read for both the curious reader who not only wants to delve into the topic of sexuality, but also a background almost of the Arab Spring and the revolution that follows it. Not a light read and one that requires a little bit of science background, although not heavy enough to make one dependent on pubmed-wiki.Social scientists will find this book a great companion, I think.
Profile Image for 4ZZZ Book Club.
111 reviews25 followers
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April 1, 2013
We were joined by Shereen El Feki to talk about the impact of religion, the nature of virginity and the convenience of ‘pleasure marriages’. Originally broadcast on 21/03/2013, the podcast is available at zedbookclub.com.

Shereen El Feki is a writer, broadcaster and academic. She began her professional life with a doctorate in molecular immunology before going on to become an award-winning journalist with The Economist and a presenter with Al Jazeera English. She is the former vice-chair of the United Nation’s Global Commission on HIV and the Law and is a TED Global Fellow.

Raised in Canada, Shereen is the child of Welsh and Egyptian parents and would visit her Egyptian family yearly as a child. As an adult, working with The Economist she was drawn to the surprisingly low HIV infection rate that was being reported in the Arab region. But as she began to dig deeper, particularly in the country of her family, she found a gap between official figures and private reality.

Shereen has spent the last 5 years traveling throughout the Arab region, with a particular focus on Egypt, looking into sex and sexuality in that world. Marriage, pre-marital sex, gay relationships, even basic education all come under in the microscope in her book Sex and the Citadel.

Profile Image for Katika.
666 reviews21 followers
December 10, 2018
Shareen El Feki jest pół-Egipcjanką, pół-Walijką wychowaną w Kanadzie. To kulturowe połączenie daje jej odpowiednią perspektywę i pozwala pisać o seksualności świata arabskiego ze zrozumieniem dla obu stron. Nie ma tu zachodniego deprecjonowania obyczajów muzułmańskich, jest szacunek i próba obiektywnego spojrzenia. Autorka skupia się na faktach, stara się przedstawić tło historyczne, kulturowe, religijne, ekonomiczne i polityczne. W iście naukowy sposób stawia tezy, szuka przyczyn, stara się nie oceniać, choć często zestawia ze sobą dwa światy: zachodni i arabski. Te porównania pokazują różnice i podobieństwa, zmiany na przestrzeni dziejów oraz wspólną sprawę: poszanowania praw człowieka, które wybijają się na główny, obok seksualności, temat książki. Europejskiemu czytelnikowi trudno będzie czasem zachować obiektywizm, nie oceniać. Ale pojawia się też refleksja, jak wiele naszych codziennych praw i przywilejów, tak dla nas oczywistych i codziennych, jest gdzieś dla kogoś odległym marzeniem. Dla mnie dwa najciekawsze odkrycia z tej lektury to ogromna rola rodziny w świecie muzułmańskim, kształtująca zarówno jednostki (kontrolująca/wpływająca na każdy aspekt życia i przyzwolenie na to), jak i całą kulturę oraz bliska korelacja seksualności i praw człowieka.
1 review1 follower
May 29, 2013
I have spent time living in and working across the Arab world, and Sex and the Citadel certainly deserves the rave reviews (see sexandthecitadel.com) that it has been getting around the world. It is balanced and informative without being preachy or Orientalist. Her background with one foot in the Arab world and one foot in the West shines through; it is also just a lot of fun to read.

Shereen also gave an inspiring presentation of her book to a packed auditorium at the Hay-on-Wye book festival!
Profile Image for Mostafa.
5 reviews34 followers
September 7, 2016
Terribly sensationalized and reads more like an article than an informative book. The title is also misleading since it's actually more about egyptian women than about sexuality and sexual culture in the arab world. I enjoyed reading it for the first 100 pages but it's basically a bland field report targeted to the west.
171 reviews2 followers
April 22, 2014
Interesting look at sexuality in the Arab world. The book, for me, loses steam in the end. It's just so dense. So I can't totally recommend it, unless you're drawn to these sorts of topics. Or if you're a fan of The Economist.
Profile Image for Yomna Asar.
314 reviews50 followers
February 8, 2016
This is an extremely brave work of literature. More often than not, people would rather pretend that difficult topics don't exist than expose raw emotionality of any kind.

Profile Image for Nihal Zaki.
220 reviews69 followers
July 22, 2025
"sex and the Cit...adel", may be the title is the only thing I found creative about the book. I'm not saying that it was bad, but it, certainly, was not creative.
May be I'm not an easy reviewer of El Feky's book. As an Egyptian, female, living in Cairo, interested and intrigued about history,sociology and religion, I didn't find much extra information in the book, May be it could have been a bit more useful for some one who knows little about Cairo , or Egypt, or even the East, and to fill the gaps through a one and easy read but the book is definetly not for you if you have already went through good reads about the subject and the region.

What was mostly missing in Shereen's book, is not exactly the extra information, but the extra linkage. I mean it was just stating habits, traditions, sexual and financial problems, in other words stating "the obvious" if you are an Arab or an Egyptian or stating the "not so obvious" if you were not. A superficial walk through without any thorough analysis, without any trial to understand, or find the links or the connections.

Another flaw, was that the material was not very cleverly devided. Titles and subtitled can easily be omitted without making much difference, so the book came as a long detailed chat .

Profile Image for Andrew.
687 reviews250 followers
January 21, 2015
Sexuality in the Arab world is, both in the eyes of westerners and often even Arab governments, something of an enigma. Sex and the Citadel is a piercing view, probably unique in the English language, into the private lives of Arab couples. Shereen El Feki, whose career spans Cambridge, the United Nations, and Al Jazeera, explodes popular myths about Arab marriage, dating, prostitution, and homosexuality always with a keen eye to the region's history and ongoing changes. Her storytelling through high-level data and numerous fascinating interviews - interviews a male author likely would never have obtained - bridges cultures and avoids an Orientalist perspective. And a dry tone, likely picked up from her work at The Economist, brings both humour and candour to an intimate and politically charged topic. Sex and the Citadel is the most intriguing book I've read this winter. Since we tend to read what we enjoy and what reinforces our existing ideas, it was a real joy to read something that surprised with its completely unexpected perspectives on the world.

I'm on Twitter: @Dr_A_Taubman
Profile Image for Amanda.
5 reviews
January 22, 2020
A well-researched and informative book. However, I have something to point out. The author argues that supposedly there was a period during the Arab history that was less conservative concerning sexual matters, and she mentions prostitution or Nefzawi's erotic book to prove her point. I am not sure these are signs of a more "liberal" society. There's always been prostitution and there's alway been people who would break the norm and talk about scandalous matters, in every place and time, but it would be regarded as negative by the majority of people. I could also think of several works of literature that were written in Europe in past ages adressing topics that wouldn't be welcome by the society (take the Book of Good Love, the Memoirs of Casanova, Madame Bovary, etc). I am not an expert on the topic though so I don't feel qualified to refute the author's point.
Profile Image for Nora Mansur.
11 reviews
February 20, 2024
Super super super BRA!!! Hun skriver på en måte som ikke gjør det tungt å lese, og er så mye som man leser så tenker man damn det har jeg ikke tenkt på men gir mening!!! Selv om det er mye fokus i Egypt, så blir det også snakket rundt andre land. Kapitlene om prostitusjon og homofili er de beste og mest interessante, dette er en MUST READ!
Profile Image for Celine Kezelian.
30 reviews
July 21, 2024
Extremely well researched, a really interesting and important read for anyone who grew up in the middle east. Written right after the 2011 Egyptian revolution so may not be as relevant today because it is full of a post-revolution hopefullness that hasn’t really materialized more than 10 years later. still very relevant and informative because she sheds light on many issues that are “swept under the rug” in our culture but are increasingly present all around. Maybe she’s tooo optimistic and liberal for the societies she’s concerned with but very well argued important nonetheless.
Profile Image for 987643467881.
66 reviews8 followers
September 14, 2015
I took issue with several things in this book:

1.Personal Journey Presented As Serious Research
I got the first hint of what this book would be like from these two quotes in the introduction:
"I was a scientist before I became a journalist, and this book reflects that training."

BUT
"This is not an academic tome, nor a slice of Arab exotica. It is, in the end, an album of snapshots from across the region taken by someone trying to better understand the region in order to better understand herself."


While these two ideas aren't necessarily mutually exclusive, that a quote from her grandmother started 5 of the 6 chapters should give you an inkling as to which tone/style dominated the book. The whole book felt like a self-indulgent "journey towards self discovery" type of book that was shrouded with pseudo-intellectual/philosophical intent:
"I took a trip to a bride show in Abu Dhabi. [...] My curiosity was as much personal as it was professional. I too was planning a wedding - my own, in fact."

Every chapter had a personal story like this that was coupled with a few statistics (what was the average age at which women got married, etc.), a few quotes from the Quran (that the author usually claimed were "misinterpreted" by the majority of Muslims and Islamic clerics), a look back at how liberal Islam was before colonialism, and a look at how the dictatorship in Egypt is the root of all sexual/women's rights issues – the “real” and “properly” interpreted Islam is usually presented as a solution.

2. Arab World = Egypt

The title of the book is really misleading. Just because the author interviewed a couple of people/writers from Lebanon and Morocco, mentioned a few statistics on other Arab countries and went to a bridal show in Abu Dhabi does not make the book about the whole Arab world. The book is almost completely about the author's personal experiences in Egypt. I wouldn't have found anything wrong with that, had the intentions of the book not been so deceptive. It felt like the author was just trying to make her book seem more grand (and perhaps appeal to a wider audience) by making it seem as though it was about the Arab World and not just Egypt.

3. The Author As a Revolutionary
The author obviously sees herself as an important voice in the changes she believes the “revolution” in Egypt will bring about; you get the impression that by using the word "f**k" a couple of times in the book, the author felt herself something of a subversive new voice on the scene ("Flaubert proceeded to f**k his way up the Nile" for example), and tries very hard to convince the reader that her work really IS making very important changes:
“Azza reckoned that her own greater knowledge of sex, sparked by years of discussing my work, had made a difference, along with her relative strength within their marriage. “After I met you, he tries to make it fun and happy with me.””

The author also doesn't miss an opportunity to mention her own participation in the Tahrir Sqaure protests. After quoting Foucault and Wilhem Reich, the author concludes that Egypt was experiencing both a political and sexual revolution (and suggests that the two are inseparable). Despite numerous protesters and groups informing her that it was NOT a sexual revolution, the author obviously felt that she knew better (and supported her theory with a quote from one young Egyptian girl who confirmed it).

4. Orientalism
It was also ironic that the author criticised Orientalism and then went on to perpetuate it. For example, making it seem like Egyptian men are obsessed with their virility and that most of them are dying to get their hands on Viagra, indirectly suggesting that men in the "West" are not concerned about their sexual performance and this is something exclusively experienced by Egyptians. An acknowledgement, if not direct comparison, of men in other parts of the world also seeking Viagra, and the extent to which they do, would have made her commentary more meaningful. The lack of male perspective in the book was particularly disturbing especially because so much of the discussion was either about, or aimed at them. The author's excuse was that the restrictions and limitations of Egyptian culture didn't permit such open dialogue with them – oh well.

The only part of the book that I truly gained anything useful from were the footnotes and references to other books/websites that I could get all the information she offered (and more) in less than a fifth of the time. Anyone looking for some real information minus the personal stories could just go directly to the references section.
Profile Image for Bookworm.
2,308 reviews96 followers
September 13, 2016
A mixed bag. I had been eager to read this after spotting it at the bookstore. El Feki has a hilarious introduction about discussing sex toys with some women and that had me hooked. Throughout the book she discusses different aspects of sexuality, gender and gender roles and other issues. However, the book is slightly misnamed. It's not really about those topics in the Arab world, as El Feki looks through the topics with the frame of Egypt and the Arab Spring specifically in Egypt, rather than across the region. Other countries do get some focus, but Egypt is her main focus.

However, the book is still a very interesting read. The author discusses marital relations, adultery, LGBT issues, dating, courtship, prostitution, etc. in various chapters. Unsurprisingly, much of what I read could easily could have taken place in more conservative parts of the United States: from the lack of sex education to the strict guidelines for dating to struggle for some who are gay and lesbian. "Conversion" therapy is apparently practiced in Arab countries as well, which surprised me to read about but in retrospect really shouldn't have.

Yet I found the book occasionally a struggle to get through. I feel like the author tried to tackle a bit too much at once: viewing intimacy through what people in majority Muslim countries do and especially with what the Arab Spring brought for people. However, the book is not a political one and the Arab Spring is backdrop to her work. The book is occasionally very academic and dry reading, but sometimes has some great/interesting/moving/sad anecdotes and stories from people who discuss various aspects of their stories to El Feki. Islam itself isn't certainly hammered over the reader's head: the Koran is quoted occasionally, but the author makes no judgements, other than providing what the Koran might say about particular situations.

The topic was really fascinating, but I couldn't help but feel disappointed with the end product. However, I think it's a really interesting read and people who have any sort of interest in Islam or sexuality or LGBT issues might want to take a look. The stories and anecdotes also aren't very lurid or titillating. If anything, I got second-hand embarrassment at some of the awkward situations (the sex toy story is probably a good example) and clear lack of sex education in some of the anecdotes.

Check it out from the library to see if you want to buy. Might be a good reference for an essay/paper/article.
Profile Image for Mandy.
3,621 reviews331 followers
January 1, 2014
Author Shereen El Feki has written an informative, insightful and extremely readable account of sex in Arab society, a largely hidden and often misunderstood aspect of life in the Muslim world. The area is shrouded in mystery and secrecy and is inevitably a sensitive area to probe into. By using real contexts and situations, and by referring to sexuality in the region throughout history, this accessible sociological examination of all aspects of sexual attitudes and practices opens up a world rarely looked into before. Shereen El Feki met and talked to all sorts of women – young and old, married, single and divorced, housewives and career women, mothers and daughters. She met too with a similar range of men. She talked with people from all walks of life, rich and poor, doctors and academics, teachers and clerics. She presents the reader with a myriad of personal stories plus a range of official and unofficial information and statistics.
With an impressive bibliography, many pages of notes, and an accompanying website where people can not only find out more but contribute their own thoughts and experiences, this is a really ground-breaking book, timely, thoughtful, sometimes upsetting, sometimes humorous, and of considerable importance and relevance to those both in the east and their western counterparts.
Profile Image for Desiree.
17 reviews2 followers
June 22, 2013
Shereen El Feki grew up in Canada as the daughter of a Welsh mother and an Egyptian father. So there you find an author with Middle-Eastern roots and western values.

Through her Egyptian family doors opend to have an insight into the Arab bedrooms. Her book highlightens the hypocracy of arab (muslim and christian) society towards any kind of sexuality.

In her interviews she examins the ignorance of anatomy of sexual organs, describes haunting fates of hetero, - homosexuals and transgenders.

She frankly talks about absolute Taboos in Arab society.

The book is well written and very informative. It confirmed all I have seen and experienced myself travelling and living in MENA countries the past 20 yrs.

Through "shame" and "taboos" people are controlled in societies, this is emphasised in this book. And I believe it takes more than an "Arab Spring" to open the windows to individual rights and opportunities.
Profile Image for Lindsey.
344 reviews52 followers
August 2, 2013
I was skeptical of this book because I thought the cover art was silly and then there's a Naomi Wolf endorsement on the back, but I found it enlightening and well-reasoned. The author makes several key points:
- It will be difficult for democracy to flourish on a political level if it cannot flourish on a private level in the home.
- The Arab world is largely focused on appearance rather than reality. "Virginity defined by anatomy, not chastity; sex tourism masquerading as marriage," etc.
-Social conservatives decry sexual openness as a crude Western import, ignoring the fact that sexual diversity was a feature of the Arab-Islamist world for centuries before the recent move toward social/sexual conservatism.
Overall, I was fully on El Feki's boat and liked her tone of cautious optimism, as well as her frank discussion of marriage, prostitution and homosexuality.
Profile Image for Jennifer Nadeau.
10 reviews
June 18, 2013
This book was exactly what I was looking for. I found it sitting by its lonesome on a library shelf and decided to take it home with me.

From a social perspective, I found the author performed a great service to people like me who like to study culture, especially in the regions of race, gender, and sexuality. Her unashamed examination of ancient texts, religious taboo and boundaries, as well as the sometimes graphic and frank exploration of average citizen's bedroom lives was extremely interesting to me. She provided most of the important details and contacted appropriate sources on both sides of the fence. The idea of sexuality as it pertains to Islam is very nice to read about as a person who knows very little about the faith.

I highly recommend this book for those looking to immerse in other cultures or ideas that may not initially seem appealing or 'comfortable' to learn about.
102 reviews1 follower
November 2, 2013
Great book for anyone interested in understanding the people of the Middle East. Message is that if views on sexuality returned to those of Islam in the past, and thus become liberalized, then political liberalism would follow. As long as the people are dependent on their families for "everything"--since the governments have few social programs to support their citizens--then their personal lives will continue to be controlled by their families and worries about what other people think. Most of the research focused on Egypt.
Profile Image for Mona.
4 reviews2 followers
September 22, 2017
This book was a fun read, and gave some good insight into sexual norms and changes primarily in Egypt but also in several other Arab countries. The first or second chapter had me giggling as I enjoyed El Feki's library adventures, but then it quickly became much more serious, dealing with some difficult topics. It is a rather broad sweep rather than an in-depth analysis of any one particular topic, but provides a background for further research.
46 reviews1 follower
August 15, 2023
3.5 - An interesting read for someone who doesn't know much about Egypt's (and Egyptians) relationship with sex. It covers a big range of topics (sex work, queerness, marriages, etc.) and is told through stories of different people. It does go outside of Egypt, to Lebanon, Tunisia and Morocco, but only briefly.
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