Lexi Stadlen is an anthropologist and ethnographer with a PhD in Social Anthropology from the London School of Economics. She spent two and a half years conducting on-the-ground research in India. She is the winner of the 2019 Bayly Prize, awarded by the Royal Asiatic Society for an outstanding thesis on an Asian topic completed at a British University. She lives in the UAE with her husband and son.
Compelling, immersive, and beautifully composed, Nine Paths is a
story woven from the true accounts of nine Muslim women from rural
India. This book is that perfect thing: exquisite storytelling
meeting serious research. It makes for a vivid and memorable
encounter - a world away brought near by Lexi Stadlen's ingenuity,
compassion, and skill.
*Suzannah Lipscomb*
Intimate, insightful and powerful, Nine Paths pulls the reader deep
into what it means to be a Muslim woman in India, and allows us to
appreciate the strength, resilience and bravery in the face of the
many forms of violence negotiated daily. Lexi Stadlen vividly
brings to life the best of immersive ethnography
*Alpa Shah, author of Nightmarch: Among India's Revolutionary
Guerrillas*
Beautifully written, and so clever - telling us in great detail
about the challenges that these women face, but with remarkable
skill and such a delicate touch.
*Sonia Faleiro, author of The Good Girls*
Nine Paths captivatingly portrays life in rural Bengal through
carefully interwoven episodes that evoke the village environs, the
social atmosphere, and especially the nine Muslim women on whom the
book focuses. The reader is taken through a year in their lives,
sees the mundane ordinariness as well as the dramas and crises of
their everyday lives, meets them as they handle marriage
negotiations, contend with awkward dynamics within their household,
worry about debts and reflect on their position as Muslims. It is a
beautifully written and haunting book.
*Patricia Jeffery, Professor Emerita, University of Edinburgh*
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