Research Catalog

Women in exile

Title
Women in exile / Mahnaz Afkhami.
Author
Afkhami, Mahnaz.
Publication
Charlottesville : University Press of Virginia, 1994.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library HQ1236.5.U6 A25 1994Off-site
TextUse in library HQ1236.5.U6 A25 1994Off-site

Details

Description
xi, 210 pages; 24 cm
Summary
  • If, as has been said, exiles, refugees, and emigrants are the defining figures for the twentieth century, the thirteen women of Women in Exile give unforgettable life to the metaphor. Their stories offer a rare and special opportunity to witness the harrowing experience of flight and dislocation and to marvel at the resilience of the human spirit.
  • "I am an exile," writes Mahnaz Afkhami. "I have been in exile for fifteen years. I have been forced to stay out of my own country, Iran, because of my work for women's rights. I recognized no limits, ends, or framework in this work outside those set by women themselves in their capacity as independent human beings. The charges against me are 'corruption on earth' and 'warring with God.' Being charged in the Islamic Republic of Iran is being convicted.
  • There is no defense or appeal, although I would not have known how to defend myself against such a grand accusation as warring with God anyway. There has not been a trial, not even in absentia, and no formal conviction. Nevertheless, my home in Tehran has been ransacked and confiscated, my books, pictures, and mementos taken, my passport invalidated, and my life threatened repeatedly."
  • Attempting to come to terms with her own life in exile, Mahnaz Afkhami sought out and talked with twelve other women, from all parts of the globe, most now settled in the United States. With her, we meet Samnang of Cambodia, survivor of a bloody march to nowhere who now teaches preventive health practices; Azar, whose flight took her through the Iran-Turkish mountains on horseback, protected by no government, sought by two, who now manages a major publications program and two healthy children; Maria Teresa, beaten, raped, and tortured in El Salvador after the assassination of her husband, who now travels around the world on behalf of human rights; Ngoc-Ho, a doctor in Vietnam, whose small child did not survive a six-day flight by boat, who is now a leader in the Vietnamese community as well as a successful pediatrician; and Alicia, once one of the "disappeared" in Argentina, who has earned a master's degree and published books of prose and poetry
Series Statement
Feminist issues
Uniform Title
Feminist issues (Charlottesville, Va.)
Subject
  • Women political activists > United States > Biography
  • Exiles > United States > Biography
  • 89.94 international relations: other
  • Exiles
  • Women political activists
  • Erlebnisbericht
  • Weiblicher Flüchtling
  • Vrouwen
  • Politieke vluchtelingen
  • Mensenrechten
  • United States
  • USA
  • USA
Genre/Form
  • Biography
  • Biographies.
Contents
Women in Exile: A Prologue / Mahnaz Afkhami -- Jade in a Bottle of Wine / Ho Ngoc Tran -- Birds without Nests / Maria Teresa Tula -- An Answer Waiting for a Question / Hala Deeb Jabbour -- A Woman in a Borrowed Country / Ge Yang -- Of Chance and Choice / Azar Salamat -- They Cut Off My Voice, So I Grew Two Voices / Alicia Partnoy -- I Was Never Homesick at Home / Florence M. Simfukwe -- I Realized I Was the Enemy / Sima Wali -- I Invented a Country / Marjorie Agosin -- In the Frame of My Life I Saw My Mother's Picture / Tatyana Mamonova -- A Lucky Woman / Samnang Wu -- Arrow at Rest / Fatima Ahmed Ibrahim.
ISBN
  • 0813915422
  • 9780813915425
  • 0813915430
  • 9780813915432
LCCN
94007817
OCLC
  • ocm30032929
  • 30032929
  • SCSB-2029940
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library