The book under review “My Forbidden Face” has been written by a young Afghan woman from Kabul under the pen name of Latifa, on the account of security. She and her family had death threats and she had to be careful as she still had friends and families back in Afghanistan, who faithfully recorded events over a five-year period as they happened to her and her family in their country (Afghanistan) after it was taken over by the Taliban. It was written after her and her family's escape to France in May 2001 and was brought to Europe in an operation organized by a French-based Afghan resistance group and Elle Magazine. Since then she has been writing My Forbidden Face in collaboration with Chekeba Hachemi, They both live in Paris. T...
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Contiene: Busfield, Andrea. Born. Under a Million Shadows. London: Black Swan, 2009 / reviewed by Bi...
Review book by James Fergusson Publication date: May, 2010 ''I just can't understand the Amer...
"Afghanistan in Ink: Literature Between Diaspora and Nation." Nile Green and Nushin Arbabzadah. C Hu...
My Life with the Taliban’ is the autobiography (written in 21 small chapters along with an epi...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
Review of Racialized Bodies, Disabling Worlds: Storied Lives of Immigrant Muslim Women by Parin Doss
Somalia’s Al Shabaab is the most resilient militant Islamist insurgency after the Afghan Taliban. It...
Malalai Joya, who was the youngest member of the Afghan Parliament elected in the 2005 elections, wa...
In Veiled Threats: Representing the Muslim Woman in Public Policy Discourses, Naaz Rashid explores h...
Taboo (2001) is a remarkable book on Pakistani prostitution, red light area, oppression on women and...
Review of Liberating Shahrazad: Feminism, Postcolonialism, and Islam by Suzanne Gauc
This book review presents a brief synthesis of the lived narratives of Muslim women presented in It'...
This paper explores Zohra Drif’s memoir, Inside the Battle of Algiers, which narrates her desires as...
In Lovecidal: Walking with the Disappeared, the feminist filmmaker and postcolonial theorist Trinh T...
Review of Velvet Jihad: Muslim Women’s Quiet Resistance to Islamic Fundamentalism by Faegheh Shiraz
Contiene: Busfield, Andrea. Born. Under a Million Shadows. London: Black Swan, 2009 / reviewed by Bi...
Review book by James Fergusson Publication date: May, 2010 ''I just can't understand the Amer...
"Afghanistan in Ink: Literature Between Diaspora and Nation." Nile Green and Nushin Arbabzadah. C Hu...