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Among the women of the Sahara / from the French of Mme. Jean Pommerol ; by Mrs. Arthur Bell (N.D'Anvers); with ninety illustrations, after drawings and photographs by the author.
Nineteenth Century Collections Online: Women: Transnational Networks Available online
Nineteenth Century Collections Online: Women: Transnational Networks- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Pommerol, Jean.
- Series:
- Nineteenth Century Collections Online (NCCO): Women: Transnational Networks.
- Nineteenth Century Collections Online (NCCO): Women: Transnational Networks
- Standardized Title:
- Femme chez les sahariennes. English
- Language:
- English
- French
- Subjects (All):
- Women.
- Slavery.
- Manners and customs.
- Sahara--Social life and customs.
- Sahara.
- Women--Sahara.
- Slavery--Sahara.
- Women--Africa, North.
- Africa, North--Social life and customs.
- Africa, North.
- North Africa.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (2 unnumbered pages, 343, 4 pages, 1 unnumbered leaf of plates) : illustrations, portraits.
- Manufacture:
- (Kelly's Directories Ltd.)
- Place of Publication:
- London : Hurst and Blackett, Ltd., 1900.
- Language Note:
- Translation of Une femme chez les sahariennes.
- System Details:
- text file
- Summary:
- "This brightly-written narrative of several months' wandering in the Sahara between El-Aghuat and In-Saleh, forms a really unique revelation of a phase, or rather of several phases, of life hitherto little known to Europeans. Madame Pommerol, with a courage and perseverance worthy of Mrs. Bishop herself, penetrated into homes in dawar and kasr jealously closed as a rule to all outsiders, sometimes succeeding in making friends with the inmates and sometimes having to beat a hasty retreat, so fierce was their hostility. She has given the results of her experience in a series of very vivid word-pictures, supplemented by sketches and photographs taken under great difficulties, for the women of the Sahara look upon the camera as an uncanny sentient being with the power of the evil eye, and moreover they consider it a positive crime to allow their portraits to be taken. In spite of all opposition, however, many evidently good likenesses of typical faces were obtained by the indomitable traveler, and will no doubt add greatly to the value of her book amongst all students of character." -- Translator's note.
- Contents:
- 1. Who are they?
- 2. First Impressions of the Arab Race
- 3. Beauty amongst the Arabs
- 4. A Difficult Chapter
- 5. More about El-Aghuat
- 6. The Women of the Kusur
- 7. The Wady M'zab and the Seven Holy Cities
- 8. Among the Mozabite Women
- 9. Negress Slaves
- 10. The Quest for Water amongst the Nomad Arabs
- 11. About Birth and Marriage amongst the Arab Tribes
- 12. Divorce in the Sahara
- 13. Wargla : the Pearl of the Oases
- 14. From Tuggurt to In-Salah
- 15. Life in the Dawar amongst the Nomad Arab Tribes
- 16. About the Camels of the Nomad Arab Tribes
- 17. On the Ideas of the Saharian Women.
- Notes:
- Publisher's advertising: (4 p.), 2nd count.
- Reproduction of the original from the Smith College Library.
- OCLC:
- 656867594
- Access Restriction:
- Restricted for use by site license.
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