This article examines the ways Egyptians monitored male sexuality in Ottoman and semi-colonial Egypt. An exploration of the legislative proposals and press debates about marriage, prostitution and venereal disease reveals that the state attempted to medicalise the sexuality of Egyptian men to create \u27healthy\u27, disciplined men who would later marry and form fit families to serve as the foundation for a strong postcolonial nation. In their attempts to medicalise male sexuality, reformers delineated the normative heterosexuality of the \u27healthy\u27 male colonial subject for the emerging nation. This article explores the sexual practices of male colonial subjects to demonstrate how Egyptian notions of sexual diseases were gendered. © ...
In the early 20th century Cairo was a vibrant and booming global metropolis. The integration of Egyp...
In this essay Katherine Franke examines two contemporary cites in which state efforts to eradicate t...
Venereal disease was commonplace among free and enslaved populations in colonial Caribbean societies...
The main aim of this interdisciplinary project is to examine attempts to codify sexual knowledge in ...
This dissertation examines the multiple ways in which the nineteenth and early twentieth-century Ott...
In Egypt, women seek hymenoplasty to disguise evidence of premarital sexual intercourse. Physicians ...
This chapter looks at sex-work in Egypt from a longue-durée perspective, before and after the coloni...
The study reported how the Arab world perceived homosexuality criminalization and decriminalization ...
This dissertation investigates the circulation of modern scientific and medical knowledge among Otto...
Emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs) contain the same hormones found in daily oral contraceptive pil...
This article explores the multiple ways in which those foreign nationals in Egypt between 1880 and 1...
The main aim of this interdisciplinary project is to examine attempts to codify sexual knowledge in ...
As the first conviction of FGM in the U.K. proves, female genital mutilation is a ‘harmful cultural ...
Male infertility is a major global reproductive health problem, contributing to more than half of al...
West European visitors to the Ottoman Empire in the early-modern period frequently referred to sodom...
In the early 20th century Cairo was a vibrant and booming global metropolis. The integration of Egyp...
In this essay Katherine Franke examines two contemporary cites in which state efforts to eradicate t...
Venereal disease was commonplace among free and enslaved populations in colonial Caribbean societies...
The main aim of this interdisciplinary project is to examine attempts to codify sexual knowledge in ...
This dissertation examines the multiple ways in which the nineteenth and early twentieth-century Ott...
In Egypt, women seek hymenoplasty to disguise evidence of premarital sexual intercourse. Physicians ...
This chapter looks at sex-work in Egypt from a longue-durée perspective, before and after the coloni...
The study reported how the Arab world perceived homosexuality criminalization and decriminalization ...
This dissertation investigates the circulation of modern scientific and medical knowledge among Otto...
Emergency contraceptive pills (ECPs) contain the same hormones found in daily oral contraceptive pil...
This article explores the multiple ways in which those foreign nationals in Egypt between 1880 and 1...
The main aim of this interdisciplinary project is to examine attempts to codify sexual knowledge in ...
As the first conviction of FGM in the U.K. proves, female genital mutilation is a ‘harmful cultural ...
Male infertility is a major global reproductive health problem, contributing to more than half of al...
West European visitors to the Ottoman Empire in the early-modern period frequently referred to sodom...
In the early 20th century Cairo was a vibrant and booming global metropolis. The integration of Egyp...
In this essay Katherine Franke examines two contemporary cites in which state efforts to eradicate t...
Venereal disease was commonplace among free and enslaved populations in colonial Caribbean societies...