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- Ghinnawa abstract "Ghinnawas (literally "little songs") are short, two line emotional lyric poems written by the Bedouins of Egypt, in a fashion similar to haikus, but similar in content to the American blues. Ghinnawas typically talk of deep, personal feelings and are often an outlet for personal emotions which might not be otherwise expressible in Bedouin society. Ghinnawas may also be sung. Lila Abu Lughod - the Arab American anthropologist, who studied the Awlad Ali Bedouins in Northern Egypt in the late 1970s, and collected over 450 ghinnawas, has published the most comprehensive work on ghinnawas to date.Ghinnawa is a form of folk poetry, in the sense that anyone in Awlad Ali society could author a ghinnawa. In a broader context, ghinnawas may be looked upon as non-standard discourse which are a means of coping with social reality, similar to other discourse forms in the Arab world like the Hikaya folktales of Tunisia, or the Gussa allegories of the Bedouin of the Sinai.".
- Ghinnawa wikiPageExternalLink recordings.shtml.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageID "8816803".
- Ghinnawa wikiPageLength "3666".
- Ghinnawa wikiPageOutDegree "27".
- Ghinnawa wikiPageRevisionID "681725495".
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Allegories.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Allegory.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Anthropology.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Arab_American.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Awlad_Ali.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Bedouin.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Blues.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Arabic_poetry.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bedouin_society.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bedouins_in_Egypt.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ethnopoetics.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Circumcision.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Couplet.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Couplets.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Egypt.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Ethnopoetics.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Folklore.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Gussa.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Haiku.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Hemistiche.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Hikaya.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Lawrence_University.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Lila_Abu-Lughod.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Lila_Abu_Lughod.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Lyric_poem.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Lyric_poetry.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Semantics.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Sinai.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Sinai_Peninsula.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Syllable.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink Tunisia.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink USA.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ghinnawa".
- Ghinnawa hasPhotoCollection Ghinnawa.
- Ghinnawa wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Arab_culture.
- Ghinnawa subject Category:Arabic_poetry.
- Ghinnawa subject Category:Bedouin_society.
- Ghinnawa subject Category:Bedouins_in_Egypt.
- Ghinnawa subject Category:Ethnopoetics.
- Ghinnawa type Group.
- Ghinnawa type Group.
- Ghinnawa comment "Ghinnawas (literally "little songs") are short, two line emotional lyric poems written by the Bedouins of Egypt, in a fashion similar to haikus, but similar in content to the American blues. Ghinnawas typically talk of deep, personal feelings and are often an outlet for personal emotions which might not be otherwise expressible in Bedouin society. Ghinnawas may also be sung.".
- Ghinnawa label "Ghinnawa".
- Ghinnawa sameAs m.027ks4p.
- Ghinnawa sameAs Q5556711.
- Ghinnawa sameAs Q5556711.
- Ghinnawa wasDerivedFrom Ghinnawa?oldid=681725495.
- Ghinnawa isPrimaryTopicOf Ghinnawa.