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Prologue: "If Only You Were Born a Boy"
Introduction: Carnival of (Post)War
PART I. PHANTOM STATE BUILDING
Chapter 1. Queen Soraya's Portrait
Chapter 2. National Women's Machinery: Coaching Lives in the
Ministry of Women's Affairs #
Chapter 3. Public and Private Faces of Gender (In)Justice
PART II. BODIES OF RESISTANCE
Chapter 4. Moral Panics, Indian Soaps, and Cosmetics: Writing the
Nation on Women's Bodies #
Chapter 5. Strategic Decoration: Dissimulation, Performance, and
Agency in an Islamic Public Space
Chapter 6. Poetic Jihad: Narratives of Martyrdom, Suicide, and
Suffering Among Afghan Women
Conclusion: The Carnival Continues
Chronology
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Offering one of the first long-term on-the-ground ethnographies of Afghanistan since the arrival of allied forces in 2001, Kabul Carnival explores the contradictions, ambiguities, and unintended effects of the emancipatory projects designed for Afghan women and imposed by the international community.
Julie Billaud is a Researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology.
"Kabul Carnival is a breeze of fresh air. Reading this well argued
ethnographic book on women's gender politics in Afghanistan allows
for a more sophisticated approach to how we view 'the other'- the
gendered other (Afghan women), as well as the religious other
(Muslim Afghans)."
*PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review*
"Kabul Carnival examines the contested and changing gender politics
in Afghanistan, largely focusing on recent issues but locating them
in a wider historical sweep, setting a context in which orientalism
and debates about modernity are echoed in the contemporary
international agenda to reconstruct Afghanistan."
*Patricia Jeffery, University of Edinburgh*
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