Decolonization, disenchantment, and Arab feminist genealogies of worldmaking
Abstract
This article analyzes the intersection of Third Worldist materialism and decolonial epistemologies in the Arab world by focusing on Lebanese filmmaker Heiny Srour’s decolonial feminist cinema in the transitional period of the 1970s to 1990s. It proposes to read Srour’s disenchanted critique of masculine Third World nationalisms and Western feminism as a practice of worldmaking that is grounded within colonial-patriarchal modernity. Using Srour’s own trajectory as an entry point into larger debates, the article reflects on what affiliation to third cinema means for crafting a cinema of liberation that reconfigures gender relations. Srour’s Leila and the Wolves (1984) exemplifies such an expansive praxis of third cinema by combining a feminist historiography that centers oral tales, myth, and genealogies with a commitment to the armed struggle. The article concludes that Srour’s decolonial feminist cinema functions as a pedagogical tool to build cross-gender coalitions necessary for the persistence of the anticolonial struggle.
Citation
Saglier , V 2022 , ' Decolonization, disenchantment, and Arab feminist genealogies of worldmaking ' , Feminist Media Histories , vol. 8 , no. 1 , pp. 72-101 . https://doi.org/10.1525/fmh.2022.8.1.72
Publication
Feminist Media Histories
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2373-7492Type
Journal article
Collections
Items in the St Andrews Research Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.