Women between solid and aring Andalusian boetry as aodel

Authors

  • AlhaM Muftin Ali

Keywords:

The presence of women, the margin, Andalusian poetry

Abstract

We all know that the country of Andalusia is a country known as the great openness, including the feminist openness, and the difference in this civilization due to the different environment and nature of societies at that time. On an important segment in which they are women, and the presence of this segment of poets was remarkable Significantly, in terms of their literary and cultural interaction, the research was adopted after the many readings of the books that mentioned the women poets in Andalusia and which mentioned the achievements of these women from culture, calligraphy and arts in addition to invading the world of literature, and competing with poets, despite the disappearance of their products, but what we have reached has proven their position strongly But we wanted to investigate the central and authoritarian presence of women in general in their literature and men's literature in terms of what poetic texts reveal, and we searched in other investigations about their existence In its text and the text of the man to explore the exclusion and marginalization that this woman faced in these societies. In all peoples, the women were not free from achievements that were fought until you showed their presence in the midst of the transformation of societies. To the books of Al-Thaghami, the most important of which are (cultural criticism, reading in cultural patterns) and (culture of illusion), which influenced the material of cultural criticism systematically for investigation and research. To analyze their personalities from their point of view in those epochs with limitations or extremism.

Published

2021-03-10

How to Cite

Muftin Ali م. إ. . (2021). Women between solid and aring Andalusian boetry as aodel. Mustansiriyah Journal for Sciences and Education, 22(1), 129–142. Retrieved from https://edumag.uomustansiriyah.edu.iq/index.php/mjse/article/view/821

Issue

Section

Research Article