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  • A Woman Like Her

  • The Story Behind the Honor Killing of a Social Media Star
  • By: Sanam Maher
  • Narrated by: Deepti Gupta
  • Length: 9 hrs and 21 mins
  • 5.0 out of 5 stars (7 ratings)
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A Woman Like Her

By: Sanam Maher
Narrated by: Deepti Gupta
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Summary

The murder of a Pakistani social media star exposes a culture divided between accelerating modernity and imposed traditional values - and the tragedy of those caught in the middle.

In 2016, Pakistan’s first social media celebrity, Qandeel Baloch, was murdered in a suspected honor killing. Her death quickly became a media sensation. It was both devastatingly routine and breathtakingly brutal, and in a new media landscape, it couldn’t be ignored. 

Qandeel had courted attention and outrage with a talent for self-promotion that earned her comparisons to Kim Kardashian - and made her the constant victim of harassment and death threats. Social media and reality television exist uneasily alongside honor killings and forced marriages in a rapidly, if unevenly, modernizing Pakistan, and Qandeel Baloch’s story became emblematic of the cultural divide.

In this deftly reported and artfully told account, Sanam Maher reconstructs the story of Qandeel’s life and explores the depth and range of her legacy from her impoverished hometown rankled by her infamy, to the aspiring fashion models who follow her footsteps, to the Internet activists resisting the same vicious online misogyny she faced. Maher depicts a society at a crossroads, where women serve as an easy scapegoat for its anxieties and dislocations, and teases apart the intrigue and myth-making of the Qandeel Baloch story to restore the humanity of the woman at its center.

©2020 Sanam Maher (P)2020 Blackstone Publishing

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Wrong birthplace

I believe Qandeel struggled with her faith, cultural and social mores. As a feminist I could write forever offering ideologies, beliefs and hegemonic interpolations which, would simply be very boring and patronising to many. I will simply say that, I feel, Qandeel Baloch was born in the wrong country for her beliefs and definitely the wrong country for her brother’s beliefs. I see this less as an honour killing, more of a feminicide by a jealous, mysoginistic brother who is highly influenced by other men’s thoughts and beliefs. Where is the ‘honour’ in removing all his family’s income as Qandeel financially supported her very poor parents and siblings? By labelling the murder as an ‘honour killing’’ it simply inflames people’s Islamophobia and racism and removes the rising murders of women for being women and having their own viewpoint.

Poor Qandeel.

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Interesting and well researched

Gives a fuller picture and perspective on a culture many read about, but don't understand

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