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Sorrow and Joy among Muslim Women
The Pukhtuns of Northern Pakistan
Study of the lives, thoughts and gham-khadi (funerals-weddings) ceremonies of Pukhtun women, especially of the elite.
Amineh Ahmed (Author)
9780521052702, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 21 February 2008
240 pages, 21 b/w illus. 3 maps 7 tables
22.9 x 15.3 x 1.5 cm, 0.373 kg
'… fascinating ethnography … The book is well written; it is short and tight, yet full of good stories and clever insights. … a serious and important contribution to the ethnography of the Northwest Frontier Province, to the study of elites, and to feminist anthropology.' Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
The Pukhtuns are numerically and politically one of the most significant ethno-linguistic groups in Pakistan and Afghanistan. This important study of Pukhtun society concentrates on the lives, thoughts and gham-khadi (funerals-weddings) ceremonies of the women, especially of the elite, wealthy and educated women (Bibiane) who have largely been overlooked in previous studies. Contesting their conventional representation as idle, it illustrates their commitment to various forms of work within familial and social contexts. It challenges the commonly assumed models of contemporary Pakistan society, which make a simplistic divide between rural and urban, Punjab and non-Punjab, and feudal and non-feudal spaces and peoples. It also contributes to broader debates about the nature and expression of elite cultures and issues of sociality, funerals and marriage, custom and religion, space and gender, morality and reason, and social role and personhood within the contexts of Islam in the Middle East and South Asia.
List of plates
List of figures
List of maps
List of tables
Acknowledgements
Note on transliteration
Glossary
Introduction
1. Gham-kh?di: framework and fieldwork
2. From the inside-out: Bibiane's 'dual lives' in and beyond the house
3. The work of mourning: death and dismay among Bibiane
4. Celebrating kh?di: communal Pukhtun weddings and clandestine internet marriages
5. The work of gham-kh?di: 'not to do gham-kh?di is shameful (sharam)
to do it a burden'
Conclusion
Appendices
References
Index.
Subject Areas: Anthropology [JHM], Spirituality & religious experience [HRLK], Islam [HRH]