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Marginalised to Double Marginalised: My Mutational Intersectionality Between the East and the West

Abstract

Intersectionality allows better understanding of the differences between individuals’ experiences. In this paper, I use intersectionality to explore how my lived experience of marginalisation is different from one context to another. I reflect on how the nature of intersectionality and the intensity of oppression are altered by context. Grounded in a brief reflection of my fragmented experience in two different contexts, I explore how my identities and their intersection ‘mutate’ from the Egyptian context to the UK context. Then, I reflect on how the intensity of oppression changed with this alteration in my intersectionality. In contextualising my intersectional experience, first I problematise viewing intersectionality as a fixed acontextual ontology. Second, as a student immigrant and racialised minority in the UK, I seek to extend intersectionality and move beyond the traditional categories of race, class, gender, religion, and sexuality to include precarity as a pivotal social category that amplifies the intensity of oppression and marginalisation, especially when intersected with race and gender. Finally, in sharing my reflection as a Middle Eastern woman, I contribute my unique experiences into the conversation, and a voice that has been muted, invisibled, marginalised and excluded from the literature.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 10/26/2020 | Link to this post on IFP |
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