Writing Women's Worlds: Bedouin Stories
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About this ebook
Lila Abu-Lughod
Lila Abu-Lughod is Joseph L. Buttenwieser Professor of Social Science at Columbia University, where she teaches anthropology and gender studies. She is the author of Writing Women's Worlds: Bedouin Stories, Dramas of Nationhood: The Politics of Television in Egypt, and Do Muslim Women Need Saving?
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Writing Women's Worlds - Lila Abu-Lughod
INTRODUCTION
Every book tells tales, some intended, some not. This is a book of stories by and about some women in a small Bedouin community in Egypt. It is made up of conversations, narratives, arguments, songs, reminiscences, even an essay, that these women shared with each other or with me. I recall them here in a certain order with a very different audience in mind. In the way I have retold these tales and the very fact that I have chosen to keep them as just stories
lies a tale meant for my professional colleagues—the anthropologists, feminist scholars, and students of the Muslim Middle East to whom this introduction is largely addressed.
In one sense, of course, the unusual form of this ethnography owes much to the remarkable women in the Awlad ʿAli Bedouin community with whom I lived. During my first stay in this small hamlet on the northwest coast of Egypt, a stay of nearly two years in the late 1970s, I rarely felt comfortable tape-recording. After I returned to the United States, I wrote a book based on eighteen tattered notebooks in which I had scribbled notes. In it I tried to present a general analysis of social life, morality, and poetry in this community, with a special focus on gender relations (Abu-Lughod 1986).
I felt, however, that there was so much more richness in people’s conversations and complexity to their lives than I had managed to convey in that book that I had to try again. I shared with many a sense of the limitations of the standard anthropological monograph, however sophisticated, sensitive, or well written, and wondered if there could be a style of ethnographic writing that would better capture the qualities of life as lived
in this community.¹ A crucial aspect of this way of living was the way it was caught up in stories. The vividness and style with which women recounted stories of everyday life impressed me. The rhythms of their conversations, the voices dropping to a whisper then rising to dramatic pitches in enactments of reported speech, the expressions, the exaggerations, the detail—all lent intensity, even urgency, to the tellings. Those of us for whom newspapers and television define what is news and books and films constitute our imaginative spaces may find it hard to grasp what stories about life and people mean in such a social world—a world in which everyone is known (or is related to someone one knows) and the only events that matter are ones that happen to them.
I returned to Egypt several times between 1986 and 1989 with the hope that if I could manage to tape-record these expressive narratives, the qualities of life that I had sensed when with these women would not so easily elude me or those for whom I wanted to write.² I did not expect that just because I would work from recorded speech, some directed at me, some uttered with scarce awareness of my presence, that I would be able to represent more faithfully the realities of life in this community. We have learned to be suspicious of claims about the transparency of texts and the capacity of representations to mirror reality. No less than any other sort of ethnography, this book of stories involves analysis and is shaped by the questions asked and the point of view taken. It presents, as Clifford (1986a) argues all ethnographies do, a partial truth.
But I like to think that this book, with its fuller use of narrative and its greater reliance on recorded speech, conveys something that my first book could not.
Intersections
My vague longing for some way to write differently about the experience of living in that particular community in Egypt initially seemed to find legitimation in the debates about women’s writing and feminist method. Sympathetic to feminist critiques of scholarship in various fields (including my own), I began to wonder if what I was seeking to do was write an ethnography in a different voice
(to borrow Gilligan’s [1982] phrase). In my early formulations of the project, I argued that this book would be written in the voice of Bedouin women (not men); more important, it would be in the voice of a woman ethnographer.³ This framing of the problem seemed especially apt given the ferment in anthropological circles about ethnographic writing. In his introduction to Writing Culture, Clifford (1986a, 19) made the controversial claim that feminist anthropologists had not been involved in textual innovation, a statement that only later gave me pause.⁴ At the time, I simply proposed that my project would fill this