Afghanistan is regarded as a ‘classical patriarchal’ society, where old social tradition,
religious doctrine and socio-economic and cultural backwardness have made women
second-class citizens. But how have women—on different levels—lived in Afghanistan? How have they treated been treated, both in the private sphere and in public? And how did they resist mistreatment during the war inside Afghanistan, in refugee camps or in diaspora? Who are the sponsors and perpetrators of human rights violations against Afghanistani women? What are the connections between Islam, local
customs, the mistreatment of women, and women’s connectedness to revolution and
jihad? This book provides answers to these questions through an innovative study of the life and short stories of one of the country’s leading female writers, Maryam Mahboob. If
offers a completely different image of both the suffering and resistance of Afghanistani women than that we in the ‘West’ have come to know.