"An impressive volume, important for its focus on the dangerous, and all too pervasive, tendency of journalists and academics to sideline class and politics in favour of cultural stereotypes. Instead, these deeply informed articles by expert historians and anthropologists confirm over and over the importance of taking into account, as the editors put it, 'the common human modes of behaving' that are characteristic of the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, both historically and in the present."--Barbara D. Metcalf, author of
Husain Ahmad Madani: Islam and the Jihad for India's Freedom and editor of Islam in South Asia in Practice"Easily readable and enjoyable, this book offers fresh and theoretically rich perspectives on a number of concerns that go well beyond Swat....Exemplary."--Marta Bolognani, School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies, University of Bristol
"A most comprehensive study of the world's most notable flashpoint--Afghanistan and its neighbouring region. Using the 1959 seminal study by Fredrik Barth as a counterpoint, this collection of essays brings classical anthropological and historical portrayals into conversation with fresh research conducted in today's world. Rich in detail, this volume is a nuanced and genuinely insightful study into the most salient themes of this region: the relationship of the Taliban and Islam; the problematic notion of 'tribe'; relations between class, patronage and the State; the importance of trade in creating new moral and cultural worlds; and the continuity and change that this part of the world has witnessed over the past 200 years....If you want genuine understanding and erudition about Pashtuns and Afghanistan, this book is for you."--Mukulika Banerjee, London School of Economics and Political Science