The ideas were a bit messy to me. At first, I was wondering if I鈥檓 reading the first arabic book about white feminism, I was about to dnf it honestly. I liked the introduction of visual art and literature in this though but other than that I kept thinking 鈥渢here are million problems that Middle Eastern/arabic women suffer from, how did this book get to be called feminist while literally ignoring all of them?鈥� The second half seemed to me like it was denouncing anti islamists and there was a clear Taliban-apologetic approach that I didn鈥檛 like. But overall, not coming straight out as a feminist and bouncing between women rights and literal women oppressors ( whether these were just ideas or systems ) ruined the whole experience for me. I just want arabic female authors calling their books 鈥渇eminist works鈥� -but never actually calling themselves feminists for some reason- to write us the books about OUR issues.