A woman pointing to zero: A symbol of money, a novel by Nawal El Saadawi "Zero Point Woman" tells the story of a woman named Firdaus who was interviewed by a reporter before being executed. In a gender discriminatory culture, she was put in a prison that murdered a man. It is a culture with a big gap between men and women. One of the symbols that appears repeatedly in the novel is money. Money is a very negative symbol in the novel and Firdaus emphasizes that people can not possess both money and integrity.
A woman of Point Zero (Arabic: امرأة عندن قطة الصفر, Emra'a enda noktat el sifr) is a novel published by Nawal El Saadawi in Arabic in 1975. Novels are based on the encounter with Saadawi with female prisoners in Qanatir prison. First person account of Firdaus, a murderer who agreed to tell the story of her life before being executed. This novel is exploring women's conquest in patriarchal society, women's circumcision and women's liberty issues. At the end of 1972, Saadawi published the magazine Women and Sex and was dismissed as director of Health Education and editor in Health Magazine. She began studying the neurosis of Egyptian women, during which she spoke of a prisoner, including a female prisoner who met a doctor at Qanatir prison and killed a man.
This enlarged article tries to challenge the classification of Alice Walker's female hero by studying the question "How the writer prove each woman's fight using the voice of a symbol and a story" I aim for it. "Purple" and "Navy's Sadavis girl" are classified as "oppression". Marginalization? "Since the scope of this article represents their norms of overcoming society, it includes two works that were designed to give women a power. Walker and Elsadowi used the symbol of the story and the voice of the story Drawing on the experiences of Serie and Phil Daus, this article will cover the usage of these literary methods by Walker and El Saadawi and demonstrate practical complexity and disdain for those protagonistic behaviors.
Nawal El Saadawi 's novel "Zero Point Woman" and Laurie Penny' s article "Egyptian Woman on Gender Discrimination" can be related internally or outside the time and location associated with the novel. Article Her wisdom, sharp memory, and her determination come from not only formal education but life experience and her persistent attributes. Many of her tribes have forgotten or did not show interest in the ancient tribal tradition, but due to the pretty shield, these traditions are sacred and perpetual inscriptions to her heart and spirit. Before she got married, the 16-year-old Pretty Shield adopted her baby whose parents were killed.