• Home
  • About MMW
  • MMW Contributors
  • Resources

Afghanistan

Muslim Women In The Eye of the Camera


Posted by tasnim on 16 Nov 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



In a short interview in The New Yorker this past September, American photographer Lynsey Addario, who has covered the Middle East and South Asia for over a decade, talks about her experience photographing Muslim women: “The more I photographed Muslim women, the more I was able to metaphorically strip away the burqas and hijabs, and […]

Read more →

Films by Afghan Women Tell Real Stories of Struggle, Patience, and Hope


Posted by samya on 15 Nov 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Women in Afghanistan tend to be depicted as enigmatic objects that defy human comprehension. Media sensationalism and selective reporting bear some of the blame. But thanks to projects like an Afghanistan-based Community Supported Film workshop that trained men and women on how to tell the stories on film, Afghan women are now also using media […]

Read more →

HBO’s “Love Crimes of Kabul”


Posted by diana on 11 Jul 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



HBO is set to air “Love Crimes of Kabul” at 9pm tonight as part of their documentary films summer series. This intimate documentary goes inside Badam Bagh, a women’s prison in Kabul, Afghanistan, to tell the stories of three women who are being accused of committing “love crimes” or more commonly termed, “moral crimes”. Among […]

Read more →

A Review of The Dressmaker of Khair Khana


Posted by nicole on 20 Apr 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



For me, Gayle Tzemach Lemmon’s The Dressmaker of Khair Khana is a journalistic field story masquerading as a feel good beach novel in the Oprah Book Club genre. That isn’t to say I didn’t enjoy reading it, but I felt it warranted something more. While Lemmon’s storytelling is her strength–the way the book is organized […]

Read more →

Just…Ugh.


Posted by fatemeh on 13 Apr 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



And speaking of trash bags, here’s a poster for Germany’s International Human Rights ad campaign: The translation reads: “Oppressed women are easily overlooked. Please support us in the fight for their rights.” Outrageous. Thanks to Kawthar for the tip!

Read more →

Wishing Upon an Afghan Star


Posted by diana on 26 Jan 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



The images that Afghanistan conjures are usually ones that mirror front-page stories of newspapers around the world: armed Taliban crouching at the entry of a mountain cave, women in burqas, and images of public stonings are just a few that are constantly associated with the country. HBO is schedule to air a two-part documentary that […]

Read more →

Masking the Problem: Afghanistan’s “Niqab” Program


Posted by sarahaji on 11 Jan 2011 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Just when I thought we were past discussing the experiences of Muslim women in dichotomies and distorted imagery, CNN pulls out this gem about Afghanistan’s most talked-about talk show: “Niqab.” “The Mask,” as American media have translated it, features “Afghan women [who] dare to speak out on [the] taboo subject of abuse by husbands.” This […]

Read more →

However Tall the Mountain: Stories from an Afghan Girls’ Soccer Team


Posted by Krista Riley on 14 Oct 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



Named from an Afghan saying that “However tall the mountain, there’s always a road,” However Tall the Mountain: A Dream, Eight Girls, & A Journey Home is the true story of a project conceived by the book’s author, Awista Ayub, to bring teenaged girls from Afghanistan to the United States for soccer training.  The story […]

Read more →

Guiding Blight: The Real Girl’s Guide to Everything


Posted by sarahaji on 12 Oct 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



The Real Girl’s Guide to Everything Else, Strike.TV’s peppy new Web series, first struck me as ludicrous. Fast-paced and low-budget, it’s riddled with plot holes and inconsistencies, becoming more fantastical as the first season progresses. The writing lacks depth, the characters lack development, and the show’s thesis whacks you across the head with startling regularity. […]

Read more →

Missionary Rhetoric: A Cry of Need from Lands of Darkness


Posted by tasnim on 06 Jul 2010 / 0 Comments
Tweet



When Margaret Atwood wrote The Handmaid’s Tale, a feminist dystopia set in a world run by a totalitarian theocracy, she said that she hadn’t “invented anything,” but taken her inspiration from fundamentalist Christianity in the United States, and the Islamic Revolution in Iran, among other things. In the context of the war on Afghanistan, Mary […]

Read more →
12345