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What impact does 40 years of war, violence, and military
intervention have on a country and its people? As the "global war
on terror" now stretches into the 21st century with no clear end in
sight, Identity and Politics in Modern Afghanistan collects the
work of interdisciplinary scholars, aid workers, and citizens to
assess the impact of this prolonged conflict on Afghanistan. Nearly
all of the people in Afghan society have been affected by
persistent violent conflict. Identity and Politics in Modern
Afghanistan focuses on social and political dynamics, issues of
gender, and the shifting relationships between tribal, sectarian,
and regional communities. Contributors consider topics ranging from
masculinity among the Afghan Pashtun to services offered for the
disabled, and from Taliban extremism to the role of TV in the
Afghan culture wars. Prioritizing the perspective and experiences
of the people of Afghanistan, new insights are shared into the
lives of those who are hoping to build a secure future on the
rubble of a violent past.
When originally published in 1984, Revolutions and Rebellions in
Afghanistan provided the first focused consideration of the 1978
Saur Revolution and the subsequent Soviet invasion and occupation
of the country. Nearly four decades later, its conclusions remain
crucial to understanding Afghanistan today. In this
much-anticipated re-release, Revolutions and Rebellions in
Afghanistan offers an opportunity for fresh insight into the
antecedents of the nation's enduring conflicts. A new foreword by
editors M. Nazif Shahrani and Robert L. Canfield contextualizes
this collection, which relies on extensive fieldwork in the years
leading up to the Soviet invasion. Specific tribal, ethnic, and
gender groups are considered within the context of their region,
and contributors discuss local responses to government decrees,
Islamic-inspired grassroots activism, and interpretations of jihad
outside of Kabul. Long recognized as a vital ethnographic text in
Afghan studies, Revolutions and Rebellions in Afghanistan provides
an extraordinary chance to experience the diversity of the Afghan
people on the cusp of irrevocable change and to understand what
they expected of the years ahead.
An extended new Preface and a new Epilogue written after the fall
of the Taliban in 2001, place The Kirghiz and Wakhi of Afghanistan,
originally published in 1979, in the context of a vastly changed
world. The original book describes the cultural and ecological
adaptation of the nomadic Kirghiz and their agriculturalist
neighbors, the Wakhi, to high altitudes and a frigid climate in the
Wakhan Corridor, a panhandle of Afghanistan that borders Pakistan,
the former Soviet Union, and the People's Republic of China. The
new Preface challenges the assumption that the root cause of
terrorism is religious. Shahrani asserts that the problem of
terrorism is fundamentally political and is historically linked to
the inappropriate model of the centralized nation-state introduced
to Afghanistan by colonial regimes. The differing responses of the
Kirghiz and Wakhi to the Marxist coup are discussed in the new
Epilogue. Shahrani has closely followed the flight of the Kirghiz
to Pakistan in 1978 and their eventual resettlement among resentful
Kurdish villagers in eastern Turkey in 1982. The ethnographic
documentation and analysis of the transformation of Kirghiz
society, politics, economics, and demography since their exodus
from the Pamirs offers valuable lessons to our understanding of the
dynamics and true resilience of small pastoral nomadic communities.
What impact does 40 years of war, violence, and military
intervention have on a country and its people? As the "global war
on terror" now stretches into the 21st century with no clear end in
sight, Identity and Politics in Modern Afghanistan collects the
work of interdisciplinary scholars, aid workers, and citizens to
assess the impact of this prolonged conflict on Afghanistan. Nearly
all of the people in Afghan society have been affected by
persistent violent conflict. Identity and Politics in Modern
Afghanistan focuses on social and political dynamics, issues of
gender, and the shifting relationships between tribal, sectarian,
and regional communities. Contributors consider topics ranging from
masculinity among the Afghan Pashtun to services offered for the
disabled, and from Taliban extremism to the role of TV in the
Afghan culture wars. Prioritizing the perspective and experiences
of the people of Afghanistan, new insights are shared into the
lives of those who are hoping to build a secure future on the
rubble of a violent past.
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