ABSTRACT

In 1957, Henny Harald Hansen, the first Danish female anthropologist, was invited to take part in an archaeological expedition to the site of the projected Dokan Dam on the Little Zab river in Northern Iraq. Although her responsibilities were originally ethnological, she became the guest first of the local sheik and later of her interpreter’s family and as a result, the doors of many Kurdish homes were opened to her that normally would have remained closed to foreigners. She travelled widely among the mountain villages of Iraqi Kurdistan and was able to see from very close range the everyday life of women.

First published in 1958 and translated in 1960, this book contains the intimate and fascinating account of Henny Harald Hansen’s travels and her encounters with the women of Kurdistan. It will be of keen interest to those studying women in Islamic societies and anthropology.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |6 pages

Contents

chapter 1|6 pages

A Year Without a Summer

chapter 2|28 pages

Here Comes the Bride

chapter 3|20 pages

My Kurdish Costume

chapter 4|19 pages

A Child and a Servant

chapter 5|11 pages

The Child that Died

chapter 6|14 pages

Snakes and Scorpions

chapter 7|25 pages

'Granny, are you going to be a Cowboy?'

chapter 8|8 pages

Beggars and Magicians

chapter 9|13 pages

The Perpetual Fire

chapter 10|10 pages

IO The Waterless Village

chapter 11|11 pages

I I Illiteracy

chapter 12|12 pages

Allah's Daughters

chapter 13|5 pages

Farewell