Read like a girl

Malala Yousafzai advocates for girls’ education, while Greta Thunberg demands climate action. Thankfully, they don’t compete with each other for fame. They do, however, challenge assumptions about what can and cannot be done in politics. Especially by girls. For the European Week of the Girl, Eurozine offers reads which may help girls navigate the treacherous swamps of international politics.

Antonija Letinić looks into what media literacy should offer to youth growing up in an age of digital transformation and of political turmoil:

 

Robert Brier asks why feminism was so dreaded by Soviet-era dissidents:

 

Zsófia Lóránd revisits the legacy of Yugoslav women’s movements:

 

Ayşe Durakbaşa surveys the history of feminism in Turkey:

 

Layli Fouroudi examines what the Arab Spring brought for Tunisian women:

 

Yemisi Akinbobola analyses obstacles to female advancement in Nigeria, which forces women to constantly negotiate, assess, and to strategically choose which fights they can fight and which they have to let slide, for the sake of their security:

 

This topical article is based on the editorial published in our 20/2019 newsletter. You can subscribe here to get bi-weekly updates about the latest publications and news on partner journals. Check further topicals here.

Published 1 October 2019
Original in English

Johann Georg Meyer, Girl reading (oil on canvas, 1848), Milwaukee Museum. Photo by quirkyjazz on Flickr.

Share article

Newsletter

Subscribe to know what’s worth thinking about.

Related Articles

Cover for: Liberal arts and sciences after Bologna: What’s next?

Times have changed, and the conditions that fostered the rise of liberal arts and sciences programs after the start of the Bologna reforms no longer obtain. This raises the question of how the liberal arts and sciences movement will continue in the near future. Can it still have any relevance in a changing context?

Cover for: How teen pregnancies skyrocketed in lockdown

How teen pregnancies skyrocketed in lockdown

South Africa is fighting to keep girls in school

In most provinces of South Africa, teen pregnancies have more than doubled during the pandemic, and the police often fail to follow up on statutory rape cases. Many schoolgirls have been cornered by the lack of digital tools, exposed to blackmail and exploitation at the hands of those they asked for help so they could participate in online learning.

Discussion


Notice: Trying to get property 'queue' of non-object in /home/eurozine/www/wp-includes/script-loader.php on line 2876

Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in /home/eurozine/www/wp-includes/script-loader.php on line 2876