Khul-Khaal

Five Egyptian Women Tell Their Stories

Nayra Atiya
Foreword byAndrea B. Rugh
Photography byAsma el-Bakry

Five contemporary Egyptian women, ranging in age from early twenties to mid-sixties, members of Cairo's impoverished middle to lower classes, told the

English edition
172 pp.
39 illus.
14X23cm
ISBN 9789774240287
For sale only in the Middle East

14.95

Five contemporary Egyptian women, ranging in age from early twenties to mid-sixties, members of Cairo’s impoverished middle to lower classes, told their life stories to Nayra Atiya over a period of many months. Their stories are fresh and vivid, recording the various roles of being co-wife in a polygamous marriage, the complications of divorce, the rituals of female circumcision and marriage, the loss of children, life-long hate and its source, the position of witchcraft and superstition in their daily lives, primitive health practices, and managing a family’s meager resources, including gold or silver khul-khaal anklets worn by married women. These self-portraits are fascinating reading and a mine of information for anyone interested in understanding contemporary Egyptian life. A foreword by anthropologist Andrea Rugh and many photographs by Asma el-Bakry are included.

Nayra Atiya

Nayra  Atiya is a UNICEF prize-winning author and oral historian. She has translated a number of works, including the novels Ramza and Zanouba by Out el Kouloub.
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