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Fedwa Malti-Douglas

Fedwa Malti-Douglas is a Lebanese-American professor and writer. She is a professor emeritus at Indiana University Bloomington. Malti-Douglas has written several books, including The Starr Report Disrobed (2000). She received a National Humanities Medal in 2015.

Biography
Malti-Douglas grew up in Deir el-Qamar, where her father was a physician. Her primary education took place at French Catholic boarding schools and at age 12, she emigrated to the United States. In 2004, she was inducted into the American Philosophical Society. Malti-Douglas is a professor emeritus at Indiana University Bloomington and the Martha C. Kraft Professor of Humanities in the College of Arts and Sciences. == Work ==
Work
Malti-Douglas studied Muslim literary texts from medieval to modern times and wrote about her findings in ''Woman's Body, Woman's Word: Gender and Discourse in Arabo-Islamic Writing'' (1991). She describes how women's bodies are increasingly seen as a threat in this literature. The work, Men Women and God(s): Nawal El Saadawi and Arab Feminist Poetics is a "penetrating and admiring analysis of El Saadawi's writing," according to Library Journal. In The Starr Report Disrobed (2000), Malti-Douglas deconstructs the issues surrounding the Bill Clinton sex scandal from a feminist perspective. The California Law Review called The Starr Report Disrobed an "insightful and peppy book." The journal also felt that the book highlighted another issue: legal document are no longer just for lawyers and jurists, but have become "salable media content and, ultimately, popular cultural artifacts." In Medicines of the Soul: Female Bodies and Sacred Geographies in a Transnational Islam (2001), Malti-Douglas gives an analysis of three autobiographies belonging to Muslim women who became more religious. Each of the women she studies have rejected the ideas of the "secular West." Her book examines how men impact and guide the daily lives and even spiritual dreams of Muslim women. Booklist wrote that "Bringing together a remarkable array of material, this set, which appears to be without competition, will no doubt succeed in providing information but also in creating dialogue around issues of sex and gender. == References ==
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