Bothaina Kamel is a novelty and a provocation in a single breath. The only woman running for Egypt's presidency, she travels without an entourage, wears a bracelet that says "Make poverty history," can outlast the most exasperating heckler in the crowd, and has no chance of winning.
"I want to create culture shock. Yes, a woman is running for president,"  says Kamel, a television presenter and ex-wife of a former cultural  minister. "Some people have come up to me and asked, 'Is it even legal  for a woman to run?' I hope to set a trend, to open a door. A girl sent  me a Twitter: 'You have given us a chance to dream.'"
 
 Kamel campaigns often in Tahrir  Square. It represents, she says, the spirit of what Egypt could be. But  the farther one travels from Tahrir Square, the more the revolutionary  fervor that overthrew Hosni Mubarak fades. Much of the country is tired. People want to fold away the epic  of last year and get on with the business of life, no matter how  imperfect, with soldiers in the streets and women far from the chambers  of power.
 
 Once at the vanguard of the protest movement, women have yet to gain any  significant influence in the new Egypt, revealing the complexities of  defining gender rights in a nation colored by Islam, inundated by  Western media permissiveness and ruled by military men operating in a  cloistered realm of gold stars and salutes.
 
 The army council that replaced Mubarak's corrupt regime has been harsh,  subjecting female dissidents to "virginity tests" to intimidate them,  and in December beating and ripping the clothes off female  demonstrators, including one stripped to her blue bra, an image that  became an icon for an unfinished rebellion.
 
 Political power has shifted to the hands of Islamists. The Muslim  Brotherhood and the ultraconservative Salafis control more than 70% of  the seats in the parliament, a prospect that worries women seeking  equality on social matters such as education and divorce. Only five  women have seats among the assembly's 508 elected and appointed members.  In 2010, a year after Mubarak enacted a quota system to expand the  female presence, 68 women won parliament seats.
 
 The military later abolished the quota, another sign the feminist agenda  was stalled against more powerful and patriarchal designs.
 
 Nawal Saadawi, 80, silver hair in pigtails, has fought for women over a  lifetime. One of Egypt's leading writers and its most eloquent feminist,  she's been at her desk for years, immortalizing women in her dozens of  books about  fictitious women and women very real. Her titles can sting  with indictment: "She Has No Place in Paradise." Women, she says, have  been betrayed in today's Egypt of mullahs and generals.
 
 "We don't hear the voice of women," she says. "We're not allowed to  speak. I've written 47 books that paved the way for women, so why am I  not allowed to speak?"
 
 There are other restive  women, young and defiant as she was when her  father's scorn for the British occupation of Egypt drew out the feminist  rebel in her, and passages such as, "Men were in control of both our  worlds, the one on earth, and the one in heaven."
 
 Nearly six decades separate Saadawi from Gihan Ibrahim, a blogger and  Revolutionary Socialist who was shot in the back with a rubber bullet  during last year's uprising. Ibrahim, like Saadawi, believes the fate of  women is entwined with the rights of minorities and laborers in a  revolution yet to fulfill its promise.
 
 "The revolution itself has not come to power," says Ibrahim. "The  military is leading a counterrevolution.... It doesn't take much to see  the true face of the military after that [blue bra] picture. It makes  you know who the enemy is."
 
 The image became a Twitter fascination, searing shorthand for how women  have become symbols of revolt but not its beneficiaries. Genital  excision, which Sadaawi underwent as a child and later described as  burning "like an abscess in my flesh," has long been prevalent,  especially in the provinces. Sexual harassment is common despite tougher  measures by the courts against offenders.
 
 "Women want their rights respected on divorce, maternity issues and  custody of children," says Ibrahim, a daughter of means who has taken up  a video camera to record her country's poverty and social injustices.  Ibrahim, who is known as Gigi, is unveiled and unblinkingly brash; she  relishes the clamor of street rallies. "I believe in the right to  abortion. Women must be able to have that choice. We want a civil,  secular state."
 
 About 3,000 women marched in solidarity after the blue bra incident, a  remarkable gathering that focused enormous international pressure on the  generals. But it had no momentum, and revealed the disparate interests  and beliefs that have long stifled Egypt's feminist movement.
 
 Female members of the Muslim Brotherhood, known as sisters, denounced  the protest, portraying the women who marched as agents of foreign  manipulation, a description used often by the military and the  Brotherhood to disparage dissent. The sisters, conjuring a cross between  a Victorian-era novel and a page from the Koran, said a woman's place  is not on the front lines of change.
 
 "It is disrespectful for a woman's dignity when she has to take to the  streets to defend her rights," says Manal Aboul Hassan, head of the  women's committee for the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party. "Does  not she have a husband, a brother or a son to defend her?"
 
 Publicly the Brotherhood espouses equality. However, it doesn't grant  women seats on its leadership council, and many of its members oppose  the idea of a woman, or a Christian, ever serving as Egypt's president. A  new book, "The Memoirs of a Former Sister: My Story With the Muslim  Brotherhood," attacks what its author, Intissar Abdel Moneim, calls the  subservient role the organization forces on female members.
 
 Abdel Moneim criticizes the teachings of the Brotherhood's founder,  Hassan Banna, as relegating women to "catering to their husbands'  desires and to reproduction."

Bothaina Kamel, a candidate for Egyptian president, campaigns in Cairo last summer. “Some people have come up to me and asked, ‘Is it even legal for a woman to run?’ I hope to set a trend, to open a door," she says. (Filippo Baciocchi / Rex Features / July 31, 2011)