Bread & Henna My Time with the Women of a Yemeni Mountain Town

Author(s): IANTHE MARY MACLAGAN

Travel Writing

Bread and Henna: an engaging travel narrative relating a social anthropologist's experiences of eighteen months living among the women of a small mountain town in Yemen during the early 1980s. Through insights into the life and cuisine of a remote community, Ianthe Maclagan offers an authentic window on a world that has gone and an intimate portrait of a country typically in the news for reasons of war and famine. An engaging and authentic travel narrative, Bread and Henna relates social anthropologist Ianthe Maclagan's experiences of eighteen months living among the women of a small mountain town in Yemen during the early 1980s. After a gruelling road journey, she is initially taken in by a family who provide support and hospitality but charge extortionate rent. Maclagan then sets up on her own, struggling with isolation and practicalities such as getting water and cooking. One day, female neighbours establish contact by offering cuttings for her rooftop garden. Then, by throwing pebbles from their roof down Maclagan's stairwell, they invite her to run errands for them. Gradually Maclagan is drawn into the life of the town and, in turn, takes it into herself. The women she gets to know have hard lives and limited choices, but prove friendly, warm, welcoming and curious. After initially attending community feasts as an honorary man, she later witnesses the hard work of women that lies behind spreads of delicious food offered to guests. As she learns the local Arabic dialect, she joins local women in long, enjoyable and sociable afternoons chewing qat. She is invited to attend weddings and other celebrations, joins visits to the sick and participates in mourning. As she integrates, Maclagan hears what the women say about their lives, about marriage, pregnancy and families; when asked how many children they have, women always include the ones who have died. Maclagan learns how women seem to have more freedoms after marriage than before, leaving their husbands in protest or to teach them a lesson. This extended encounter with women of a remote community furnishes detailed descriptions of a different approach to life and cuisine. This memoir will enthral lovers of travel writing, people interested in the workings of different societies and the lives of women, and those who have travelled to Yemen, or have yearned to do so. AUTHOR: Ianthe Maclagan lived in Jebel Hufsah, a small town high in the mountains of Yemen, during the early 1980s, conducting fieldwork for a University of London doctorate in social anthropology. Enchanted by her experiences, she returned several times until conflict put a hold on such travel. Maclagan's research publications include a chapter on food and gender in a Yemeni highland community within a book on culinary cultures in the Middle East. Her subsequent professional career includes a role as Children's Rights Commissioner for Oxfordshire, set up in response to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. She lives in Oxford, UK. Bread and Henna is her travel-writing debut.

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Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9781784779757
  • : Bradt Travel Guides
  • : Bradt Travel Guides
  • : 01 August 2023
  • : {"length"=>["19.8"], "width"=>["13"], "units"=>["Centimeters"]}
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : IANTHE MARY MACLAGAN
  • : Paperback
  • : 352