
A Border Passage: From Cairo to America—A Woman’s Journey
Ahmed, Leila
1999, Farrar Straus & Giroux, 0-37411518-4, $24 hb; 2000, Penguin usa, 0-14-029183-0, $13.95 pb
Two transformations make up this book: The political and social 20th-century transformation of Egypt, and the transformation of a Cairene child into a self-aware Egyptian woman scholar in the West. The mutually reflecting viewpoints of the child, the foreign student in England, the developing scholar and the established intellectual authority—author of an important book on Women and Gender in Islam—make this articulate memoir three-dimensional. The facts may or may not be objectively accurate, but “their trace and residue in my consciousness” are equally important.
You may also be interested in...

Author Aminata Sow Fall’s Empire of Illusion—Our Book Review
What do we owe each other? What do we owe ourselves? These are the questions that Senegalese author Aminata Sow Fall has posed for nearly half a century.
A History of Mali’s National Drink Traces Green Tea—Book Review
By tracing ritual instead of commerce, anthropologist Ute Röschenthaler shows that the story of tea in West Africa involves multidirectional routes and local agency.