East Baton Rouge Parish Library

The underground girls of kabul, in search of a hidden resistance in afghanistan, Jenny Nordberg

Label
The underground girls of kabul, in search of a hidden resistance in afghanistan, Jenny Nordberg
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
unknown
Main title
The underground girls of kabul
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
869379294
Responsibility statement
Jenny Nordberg
Sub title
in search of a hidden resistance in afghanistan
Summary
An investigative journalist uncovers a hidden Afghan custom that will change your understanding of what it means to grow up as a girl. Expanding on her widely read New York Times article "Afghan Boys Are Prized, So Girls Live the Part," in which she uncovered the phenomenon of bacha posh (literally "dressed up like a boy" in Dari), the practice of disguising and raising young girls as boys, Jenny Nordberg constructs a powerful and moving account of the long-standing tradition that has enabled many girls to counter the challenges they face in a deeply segregated society where they have almost no rights. Through extensive in-depth reporting and first-person interviews, Nordberg offers a fascinating, almost fairy-tale-like look at how girls can be willed into looking, behaving, and acting as boys, why mothers would ask that of their daughters, and what ultimately happens when some girls do not want to rescind the prerogatives that go along with living as boys, and later as men. Divided into four parts, following strong characters through childhood, puberty, married life, and childbirth, The Underground Girls of Kabul charts the entire life cycle of Afghan women and gets to the heart of how bacha posh has profoundly affected generations, not only in the greater historical and political context of Afghanistan but also what it means to women everywhere now
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