From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations

When Afghan women are mentioned in the story of the country’s independence, it is most often in relationship to men, as either objects of King Aman Allah Khan’s Islamic reforms (r.1919-1929) or else as the locus of backlash against these reforms. This narrative reverberates to this day in discourses...

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Main Author: Marya Hannun
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Mnémosyne
Series:Genre & Histoire
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5017
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author Marya Hannun
author_facet Marya Hannun
author_sort Marya Hannun
collection DOAJ
description When Afghan women are mentioned in the story of the country’s independence, it is most often in relationship to men, as either objects of King Aman Allah Khan’s Islamic reforms (r.1919-1929) or else as the locus of backlash against these reforms. This narrative reverberates to this day in discourses about “saving” Afghan women, which paints a picture of a conflict-prone society where women are reduced to a monolithic, voiceless category. Yet locating women in this historical period tells a more nuanced and far-reaching story. This article traces Afghan women and the discourses around them across archives from Egypt to India in order to demonstrate how the nascent women’s movement that emerged in early twentieth-century Afghanistan was part of a broader transregional dialogue in which elite women were key actors. The “Balkans-to-Bengal complex” identified by Shahab Ahmad has galvanized scholars of the early modern Islamic world to think through new spatial frameworks, and the Ottoman-Indian nexus continues to provide a useful frame of reference for understanding women’s reform between the two World Wars. I discuss methodological approaches to locating women and their voices in male-dominated archives, as well as the theoretical insights provided by this endeavor. In so doing, I challenge accounts that isolate Afghanistan and dismiss women’s participation during this period as instrumental and ephemeral.
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spelling doaj.art-3a52b5adea0e478383435471876ff6692024-02-14T10:20:12ZfraAssociation MnémosyneGenre & Histoire2102-58862510.4000/genrehistoire.5017From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional TransformationsMarya HannunWhen Afghan women are mentioned in the story of the country’s independence, it is most often in relationship to men, as either objects of King Aman Allah Khan’s Islamic reforms (r.1919-1929) or else as the locus of backlash against these reforms. This narrative reverberates to this day in discourses about “saving” Afghan women, which paints a picture of a conflict-prone society where women are reduced to a monolithic, voiceless category. Yet locating women in this historical period tells a more nuanced and far-reaching story. This article traces Afghan women and the discourses around them across archives from Egypt to India in order to demonstrate how the nascent women’s movement that emerged in early twentieth-century Afghanistan was part of a broader transregional dialogue in which elite women were key actors. The “Balkans-to-Bengal complex” identified by Shahab Ahmad has galvanized scholars of the early modern Islamic world to think through new spatial frameworks, and the Ottoman-Indian nexus continues to provide a useful frame of reference for understanding women’s reform between the two World Wars. I discuss methodological approaches to locating women and their voices in male-dominated archives, as well as the theoretical insights provided by this endeavor. In so doing, I challenge accounts that isolate Afghanistan and dismiss women’s participation during this period as instrumental and ephemeral.https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5017AfghanistangenderwomenreformIslaminterwar
spellingShingle Marya Hannun
From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations
Genre & Histoire
Afghanistan
gender
women
reform
Islam
interwar
title From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations
title_full From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations
title_fullStr From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations
title_full_unstemmed From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations
title_short From Kabul to Cairo and Back Again: The Afghan Women’s Movement and Early 20th Century Transregional Transformations
title_sort from kabul to cairo and back again the afghan women s movement and early 20th century transregional transformations
topic Afghanistan
gender
women
reform
Islam
interwar
url https://journals.openedition.org/genrehistoire/5017
work_keys_str_mv AT maryahannun fromkabultocairoandbackagaintheafghanwomensmovementandearly20thcenturytransregionaltransformations