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Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo

This thesis offers a spatial analysis of engagement and marriage among young people from Būlāq ad-Dakrūr, Cairo. It explores how these individuals negotiate their access to spaces within a neoliberal city and use them to find potential partners, meet with those partners once they have found them and...

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Main Author: van Dalen, Elaine
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2013
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access_status_str Open Access
author van Dalen, Elaine
author_browse van Dalen, Elaine
author_facet van Dalen, Elaine
author_sort van Dalen, Elaine
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv The author retains all rights with regard to copyright. The author certifies that written permission from the owner(s) of third-party copyrighted matter included in the thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study has been obtained. The author further certifies that IRB approval has been obtained for this thesis, or that IRB approval is not necessary for this thesis. Insofar as this thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study is an educational record as defined in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 USC 1232g), the author has granted consent to disclosure of it to anyone who requests a copy.
description This thesis offers a spatial analysis of engagement and marriage among young people from Būlāq ad-Dakrūr, Cairo. It explores how these individuals negotiate their access to spaces within a neoliberal city and use them to find potential partners, meet with those partners once they have found them and to live with them when they first get married. The researcher had informal conversations with about 30 individuals between the age 18 and 30 and their family members, mostly during the spring of 2013. The outcome shows that the neighborhood has a primary function in the shaping of gendered subjectivities that try to live up to the expectations in their community and therefore choose to act in certain ways in relation to engagement and partner finding. Though neighborhood etiquette prescribes that people of opposite sexes who are not related are not supposed to meet each other unless they’re married, young individuals creatively search for opportunities to meet with people of the other sex in spaces away from the eyes who can judge them about doing so. The mobility of young women, who often work in low-paid service jobs in more affluent adjacent areas and go to school outside their neighborhood, is central to new understandings of engagements as more temporal relationships that involve fun and romance and come to mean more than just official agreements between families. The anonymity of public spaces in the city offers possibilities of secrecy, privacy and adventure away from a neighborhood community whose moral expectations would otherwise restrict much of young people’s actions. While many spaces in the city have increasingly become privatized and mostly accessible to people with money, such as clubs and cafés, young poor people are yet creative to assert their right to the city and make use of those open places still available to their use. Many young women continue to use their ability to negotiate their freedom of movement within the spaces of their new house and outside of it after they marry.
format Thesis
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:44.926Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2013
publishDateRange 2013
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publisher AUC Knowledge Fountain
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source_str AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-2020 Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo van Dalen, Elaine This thesis offers a spatial analysis of engagement and marriage among young people from Būlāq ad-Dakrūr, Cairo. It explores how these individuals negotiate their access to spaces within a neoliberal city and use them to find potential partners, meet with those partners once they have found them and to live with them when they first get married. The researcher had informal conversations with about 30 individuals between the age 18 and 30 and their family members, mostly during the spring of 2013. The outcome shows that the neighborhood has a primary function in the shaping of gendered subjectivities that try to live up to the expectations in their community and therefore choose to act in certain ways in relation to engagement and partner finding. Though neighborhood etiquette prescribes that people of opposite sexes who are not related are not supposed to meet each other unless they’re married, young individuals creatively search for opportunities to meet with people of the other sex in spaces away from the eyes who can judge them about doing so. The mobility of young women, who often work in low-paid service jobs in more affluent adjacent areas and go to school outside their neighborhood, is central to new understandings of engagements as more temporal relationships that involve fun and romance and come to mean more than just official agreements between families. The anonymity of public spaces in the city offers possibilities of secrecy, privacy and adventure away from a neighborhood community whose moral expectations would otherwise restrict much of young people’s actions. While many spaces in the city have increasingly become privatized and mostly accessible to people with money, such as clubs and cafés, young poor people are yet creative to assert their right to the city and make use of those open places still available to their use. Many young women continue to use their ability to negotiate their freedom of movement within the spaces of their new house and outside of it after they marry. 2013-02-01T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1021 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/2020/viewcontent/Urban_20Geographies_20of_20Romance.pdf The author retains all rights with regard to copyright. The author certifies that written permission from the owner(s) of third-party copyrighted matter included in the thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study has been obtained. The author further certifies that IRB approval has been obtained for this thesis, or that IRB approval is not necessary for this thesis. Insofar as this thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study is an educational record as defined in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 USC 1232g), the author has granted consent to disclosure of it to anyone who requests a copy. Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Egypt Marriage--Religious aspects--Islam
spellingShingle Egypt
Marriage--Religious aspects--Islam
van Dalen, Elaine
Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo
title Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo
title_full Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo
title_fullStr Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo
title_full_unstemmed Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo
title_short Urban geographies of romance: meeting and mating in Cairo
title_sort urban geographies of romance meeting and mating in cairo
topic Egypt
Marriage--Religious aspects--Islam
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1021
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/2020/viewcontent/Urban_20Geographies_20of_20Romance.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT vandalenelaine urbangeographiesofromancemeetingandmatingincairo