Produktbild: Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women

Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women

Fr. 98.90

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.08.2022

Abbildungen

40 b&w illus. - 40 Illustrations, black and white

Herausgeber

Siobhan Lambert-Hurley + weitere

Verlag

Indiana University Press

Seitenzahl

532

Maße (L/B/H)

25.4/17.8/2.9 cm

Gewicht

960 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-253-06239-0

Beschreibung

Rezension

Compiled by editors Siobhan Lambert-Hurley, Daniel Majchrowicz and Sunil Sharma, Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women showcases writings from 45 Muslim women - acquired through an extensive selection of writings in 10 languages, including Arabic, Turkish, Urdu, Punjabi, Indonesian, English and others. . . . What emerges is a group of women writers who were not afraid to voice their thoughts in the presence of authority figures and unfavourable circumstances. Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women Writers is an enduring testament to just a few of the countless fascinating stories documented by women travellers throughout the ages.

- Fehmida Zakeer (The National News)

This anthology will be of interest to anyone working on travel, colonial history, Muslim women, and comparative literature, Islamic Studies. It will also be an excellent resource in many courses that cover a range of topics be it religious piety, feminism, travel, travel writing, and much more.

- Shobhana Xavier (New Books Network)

The amount of work that has gone into uncovering these sources should not be understated. Lambert-Hurley and her team researched the book over seven years, collaborating with experts in Arabic sources and visiting private collections in rural Punjab. Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women is all the more valuable for rendering visible a previously unwritten history of Muslim women travellers. It deserves a place on your bookshelf!

- Evelyn Nichols (she/her) (Off the Shelf)

This anthology will interest scholars and general readers wanting to know more about travel writing, gender, Muslim women, Islamic studies, colonial history and global history. It is also a good resource for many undergraduate and graduate courses.

- Ammad Ali Malik (The News on Sunday (Pakistan))

Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women fills important gaps in the history of Islam and the Islamicate cultures....Among the merits of this collection is that it can be read at multiple levels. It appeals to students of Islamic history because it offers important insights about family structures and social habits, including some interesting ethno-graphic notes that are otherwise under looked in texts that are more focused on the history of the Islamic institutions. It is an important tool for students who have an interest in gender and women studies especially as it contributes to decentring Europe and the West and shifting the focus on the Muslim world.

- Lucia Sorbera, The University of Sydney (Afriche e Orienti)

This timely scholarly intervention provides a much-needed counternarrative to the stereotypical conceptions and notions of what it meant-or means-to be a Muslim woman . . . Going through the narratives in Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women, one is touched by their authenticity. In speaking of traditionally feminine concerns, none of the women seem to be relinquishing power, but rather exerting it, usually in a quiet, confident, and rather subversive manner. The excerpts contained in the book suggest that a much larger and richer body of work is available for translation to provide alternative, authentic narratives of the Muslim woman's experience.

- Mariam Zia (Scholarly Editing)

'Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women', edited by Siobhan Lambert-Hurley, Daniel Majchrowicz, and Sunil Sharma, disrupts this narrative in a groundbreaking way. It's a meticulously curated collection of firsthand accounts of Muslim women travellers, spanning ten different languages across the 17th to the 20th centuries. This book is more than just a travelogue; it's an act of historical reclamation that unearths the voices of intrepid women who ventured out into the world, defying the stereotypes of female seclusion often associated with Muslim societies.

- Sobhika Vasanthan (Homegrown)

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.08.2022

Abbildungen

40 b&w illus. - 40 Illustrations, black and white

Herausgeber

Verlag

Indiana University Press

Seitenzahl

532

Maße (L/B/H)

25.4/17.8/2.9 cm

Gewicht

960 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-253-06239-0

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Three Centuries of Travel Writing by Muslim Women
  • Acknowledgments
    A Note on Translation, Transliteration and Syntax
    Introduction: Muslim Women, Travel Writing and Cultures of Mobility, by Siobhan Lambert-Hurley and Daniel Majchrowicz
    Part I: Travel as Pilgrimage
    1. The Widow of Mirza Khalil: A Bereaved Wife Seeks Solace
    2. Nawab Sikander Begum: A Queen's Impressions of Mecca
    3. Mehrmah Khanom: Adventures on the Road to Iraq
    4. Hajiyeh Khanom Alaviya Kermani: Iran to Mecca by Way of Bombay
    5. Sakineh Soltan Khanom Esfahani Kuchak: Iraq Diary
    6. Nawab Sultan Jahan Begum: The Long March to Medina
    7. Ummat al-Ghani Nur al-Nisa: Notes from Mecca and the Levant
    8. Begum Sarbuland Jang: Seeking Sisterhood in Damascus
    9. Rahil Begum Shervaniya: Life Aboard a Pilgrim Ship
    10. Nur Begum: Poems from a Punjabi Pilgrim
    11. Zainab Cobbold: At Home in the Hijaz with a British Convert
    12. Fatima Begum: An Indian Haji Observes her Fellow Pilgrims
    13. Qaisari Begum: The Long Road to Mecca
    14. Begum Hasrat Mohani: Letters from a Pilgrimage to Iraq
    15. Mahmooda Rizvi: Three Months in Iraq
    Part II: Travel as Emancipation and Politics
    16. Melek Hanim: A Turk among the Greeks
    17. Huda Shaarawi: A European Summer on the Eve of War
    18. Zeyneb Hanoum: A Turkish Désenchantée in Europe
    19. Selma Ekrem: Alone in New York City
    20. ¿ükûfe Nihal Bäar: Three Days in Finland
    21. Halide Édib: A Turkish Nationalist in Colonial India
    22. Amina Said: An Egyptian Feminist at an Indian Conference
    23. Shareefah Hamid Ali: Representing India at the United Nations
    24. Suharti Suwarto: Ten Indonesian Women in the Soviet Union
    Part III: Travel as Education
    25. Atiya Fyzee: Living and Learning in London
    26. Maimoona Sultan: To Turkey by Train through a Child's Eyes
    27. Sediqeh Dowlatabadi: An Iranian Feminist Travails in France
    28. Begum Habibullah: With Three Boys at an English Boarding School
    29. Iqbalunnisa Hussain: At the University of Leeds
    30. Muhammadi Begum: Oxford Diary
    31. Herawati Diah: A Journalist in the Making
    32. Mehr al-Nisa: An Indian Nurse in Ohio
    33. Zaib-un-nissa Hamidullah: Sixty Days in America
    Part IV: Travel as Obligation and Pleasure
    34. Princess Jahanara: Mystical Meetings in Kashmir
    35. Dilshad: A Prisoner is Taken to Khoqand
    36. Sayyida Salamah bint Said/Emily Ruete: A Lover's Flight from Zanzibar
    37. Taj al-Saltanah: Life and Death in Qajar Iran
    38. Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain: A Pleasure Trip to the Himalaya
    39. Nazli Begum: On Grand Tour with the Nawab of Janjira
    40. Safia Jabir Ali: Touring Europe on Business
    41. Sughra Humayun Mirza: Meeting the Caliph in Switzerland
    42. Sughra Sabzvari: An Indian Family in Iran
    43. Shaista Suhrawardy Ikramullah: Life in England on the Brink of War
    44. Shams Pahlavi: A Shah's Daughter in Exile
    45. Nyonya Aulia-Salim: An Indonesian Tours America by Motor
    Glossary
    Contributors
    Index