Skip to content

Namesake

N.S. Nuseibeh

Reflections on A Warrior Woman

Barcode 9781838852634
Hardback

Original price £13.71 - Original price £13.71
Original price
£13.71
£13.71 - £13.71
Current price £13.71

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 01/02/2024

Edition: Main
Genre: Non-Fiction
Sub-Genre: Biography
Label: Canongate Books
Language: English
Publisher: Canongate Books

Reflections on A Warrior Woman
A collection of essays exploring what it means to be a young secular Muslim woman today by N.S. Nuseibeh, who reflects on her ancestor Nusayba, the only woman warrior to have fought alongside the Prophet

WINNER OF THE JHALAK PROSE PRIZE 2025
WINNER OF THE GUILD OF FOOD WRITERS AWARD 2025
WINNER OF THE RSL GILES ST AUBYN AWARD FOR NON-FICTION 2022

'A wonderful book about the deep backstories and the tangled histories of N. S. Nuseibeh's own multiple identit[ies]' MARK HADDON

'Explores vulnerability, fragility, anxiety, and ambivalence as ways of beautifully coming to terms with the wounds and worries of the world' HOMI K. BHABHA

*

I may not be brave enough, but somewhere deep inside of me there is, perhaps, the kernel of someone who is.


That brave someone was the legendary Nusayba bint Ka'ab al Khazrajia, who fought alongside the Prophet Muhammad at the dawn of Islam, the author N.S Nuseibeh's ancestor. In drawing on Nusayba's stories, Nuseibeh delves into the experience of being an Arab woman today and in the distant past - taking her from superheroes and the glorification of violence to the rise of Arab feminism, to what courage looks like in the context of interminable conflict. By seeking to understand her namesake in the context of her own twenty-first century concerns, Nuseibeh links our current ideas of Muslims and Arabs with their origins, exploring myth-making and identity, religion and nationhood, feminism and race.

As intimate as they are thoughtful, these linked essays offer a dazzling exploration of heritage, gender and the idea of home, while also showing how connecting with our history can help us understand ourselves and others today.