gender dimension in nearly all accounts of Afghanistan, the woman question was an integral part of the conflict between the Mujahideen and the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA), the ruling party which came to power in the Saur Revolution.
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Recent feminist scholarship has revealed the centrality of the woman question during periods of social change or political contest (Yuval-Davis and Anthias 1989; Moghadam 1990, 1991). Women frequently become the symbol or marker of political goals and cultural identity during processes of revolution and state-building, and when power is being contested or reproduced. Representatives of women are deployed, including the unveiled woman of today, who signifies modernity and national progress, or the veiled, domesticated woman, who symbolizes authenticity and the cultural reproduction of the group. Women's behavior and appearanceand the range of their activitiescome to be defined by, and are frequently subject to, the political or cultural objectives of political movements, states, and leaderships. In some political projects, women may be linked to modernization and progress (as in the case of Turkey under Ataturk, Tunisia under Bourguiba, South Yemen under Marxist leadership, and Afghanistan under the PDPA). In other political projects, women are linked to cultural rejuvenation and religious orthodoxy (as in the case of Iran under Ayatollah Khomeini, Pakistan under Zia ul-Haq, the Afghan Mujahideen). In patriarchal contexts in particular, where women's reproductive roles are fetishized in the context of kinship-ordered structures, women must also assume the burden of maintaining, representing, and transmitting cultural values and traditions.
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This essay considers the importance of the women's rights issue in recent Afghan history, and the battle over "the woman question" between fundamentalists and reformers. The issue of women's rights in Afghanistan has historically been constrained by (1) the patriarchal nature of gender and social relations, deeply embedded in traditional communities, and (2) the existence of a weak central state, which since at least the beginning of this century has been unable to fully implement modernizing programs and goals. The two are interconnected, for the state's weakness is correlated with a strong (if fragmented) society resistant to state bureaucratic expansion, civil
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