Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Resisting Quietly: Strategic Agency in Contemporary Pashtun Women’s Fiction

View through CrossRef
While the body of literary feminist criticism is growing rapidly, Pashto women's short fiction is still an unexplored area, especially in relation to gendered resilience and post-war womanhood. This study explores how contemporary Pashto short fiction authored by Pashtun women articulates female agency, identity, and survival in the shadow of war and conflict. This study focuses on two short stories titled Number Thirteen by Batool Haidari and The Other Side of the Window by Homayra Rafat. It examines how Pashtun women's lives are reflected in a fictionalized yet deeply rooted portrayal of motherhood, resilience, and mourning. This study, through textual analysis, aims to unpack the recurring motifs of resistance and voice in these short narratives. Framed through Insider Feminism and Strategic Essentialism, this study foregrounds how Pashtun female authors reject frameworks of Western identity while drawing on collective identity to challenge gendered representation and emphasize cultural representation. The findings of this study reveal that Pashtun women writers of selected short narratives attempt at reclaiming their agency and navigating womanhood within the systems of war, family, and patriarchy. Ultimately, these stories serve not just as narratives but also as embodiments of cultural memory and acts of soft resilience.
Title: Resisting Quietly: Strategic Agency in Contemporary Pashtun Women’s Fiction
Description:
While the body of literary feminist criticism is growing rapidly, Pashto women's short fiction is still an unexplored area, especially in relation to gendered resilience and post-war womanhood.
This study explores how contemporary Pashto short fiction authored by Pashtun women articulates female agency, identity, and survival in the shadow of war and conflict.
This study focuses on two short stories titled Number Thirteen by Batool Haidari and The Other Side of the Window by Homayra Rafat.
It examines how Pashtun women's lives are reflected in a fictionalized yet deeply rooted portrayal of motherhood, resilience, and mourning.
This study, through textual analysis, aims to unpack the recurring motifs of resistance and voice in these short narratives.
Framed through Insider Feminism and Strategic Essentialism, this study foregrounds how Pashtun female authors reject frameworks of Western identity while drawing on collective identity to challenge gendered representation and emphasize cultural representation.
The findings of this study reveal that Pashtun women writers of selected short narratives attempt at reclaiming their agency and navigating womanhood within the systems of war, family, and patriarchy.
Ultimately, these stories serve not just as narratives but also as embodiments of cultural memory and acts of soft resilience.

Related Results

Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Pregnant Prisoners in Shackles
Photo by niu niu on Unsplash ABSTRACT Shackling prisoners has been implemented as standard procedure when transporting prisoners in labor and during childbirth. This procedure ensu...
A Cultural Responses to Entrepreneurial Activities in Pashtun Society of Pakistan
A Cultural Responses to Entrepreneurial Activities in Pashtun Society of Pakistan
Entrepreneurship is playing a vital role in national socioeconomic development.  Entrepreneurial endeavors are significantly influenced by culture. In this study, the cultural barr...
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
The Women Who Don’t Get Counted
Photo by Hédi Benyounes on Unsplash ABSTRACT The current incarceration facilities for the growing number of women are depriving expecting mothers of adequate care cruci...
Pashtuns
Pashtuns
With an estimated thirty million or more in Pakistan, twelve million in Afghanistan, and perhaps a million or more in a global diaspora, Pashtuns or Pukhtuns comprise a complex eth...
Recreating Prometheus
Recreating Prometheus
Prometheus, chained to a rock, having his liver pecked out by a great bird only for the organ to grow back again each night so that the torture may be repeated afresh the next day ...
Women Rights in Pashtun Tribes of Pakistan: Challenges and Opportunities
Women Rights in Pashtun Tribes of Pakistan: Challenges and Opportunities
In Pakistan, women make up more than half of the population and are respected as independent persons under Sharia and Pakistani law. Nevertheless, gender-based violence and sexism ...
METHODOLOGY OF CREATING STRATEGIC AND INVESTMENT PLANS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
METHODOLOGY OF CREATING STRATEGIC AND INVESTMENT PLANS FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Abstract. The purpose of the article is to substantiate the principles and present the author’s methodology for creating strategic and investment plans for the development of educa...
Speculative Fiction
Speculative Fiction
The term “speculative fiction” has three historically located meanings: a subgenre of science fiction that deals with human rather than technological problems, a genre distinct fro...

Back to Top