Shadow City :A Woman Walks Kabul
By: Khan , Taran N.
Publisher: Gurgaon Vintage 2019Description: 239p.ISBN: 9780670090600.Subject(s): Manners and customs -- Women -- Travel -- Afghanistan-KabulDDC classification: 958.1047 Summary: For most Indians, Kabul is a city that is near, yet far-familiar, yet unknown. When Taran N. Khan arrived in Kabul in the spring of 2006, five years after the overthrow of the Taliban regime, she was earnestly cautioned never to walk. Her instincts compelled her to do the opposite: to take that precarious first step and enter the life of the city with the unique, tactile intimacy that comes from being a walker. She didn't stop until 2013, when she returned to India. In Shadow City, Taran N. Khan paints a lyrical, personal, and meditative portrait of a city we know primarily in terms of conflict and peace. As a Muslim woman raised in a small town in India, Taran discovered that she had access to parts of Kabul uncharted by travellers before her. The result reads like an elegiac prose map of the city, rich with surprises-from the glitter of wedding halls that shine like a bizarre version of Las Vegas; to the mental health hospital where women are abandoned and isolated but exist in a rare space of freedom and solitude; to the bookseller behind The Bookseller of Kabul, who sued Åsne Seierstad for her portrayal of him and then published the rebuttal which he displays proudly in his shop window.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | NASSDOC Library | 958.1047 KHA-S (Browse shelf) | Available | 51298 |
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958.1003 CLE-C Conflict in Afghanistan : A historical encyclopedia | 958.1044 BON-A Among the Afghans | 958.1044 MEH-M March of folly in Afghanistan: 1978-2001 | 958.1047 KHA-S Shadow City | 958.40841 HAU-; Establishment of national republics in Soviet Central Asia | 958.45 SAB-; Russian colonization and the genesis of Kazak national consciousness | 958.6 TAJ; Tajikistan: the trials of independence |
For most Indians, Kabul is a city that is near, yet far-familiar, yet unknown. When Taran N. Khan arrived in Kabul in the spring of 2006, five years after the overthrow of the Taliban regime, she was earnestly cautioned never to walk. Her instincts compelled her to do the opposite: to take that precarious first step and enter the life of the city with the unique, tactile intimacy that comes from being a walker. She didn't stop until 2013, when she returned to India. In Shadow City, Taran N. Khan paints a lyrical, personal, and meditative portrait of a city we know primarily in terms of conflict and peace. As a Muslim woman raised in a small town in India, Taran discovered that she had access to parts of Kabul uncharted by travellers before her. The result reads like an elegiac prose map of the city, rich with surprises-from the glitter of wedding halls that shine like a bizarre version of Las Vegas; to the mental health hospital where women are abandoned and isolated but exist in a rare space of freedom and solitude; to the bookseller behind The Bookseller of Kabul, who sued Åsne Seierstad for her portrayal of him and then published the rebuttal which he displays proudly in his shop window.
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