The book rereads the historiography of the Liberation War of Bangladesh
in 1971 documented by Bangladeshi, Indian, and Western historians to
trace the position of women who share a negligible place in the gendered
war history. It analyses how contemporary novels of South Asia have
dealt with the war and highlights women's issues like their
subordination through blame, their agency in the war, and their
victimization in the ethnic politics of their men. The book has also
taken into account nonfictional works of contemporary women
ethnographers and studies the lives of women who had engaged in the 1971
war not only as victims, but also as social workers, healthcare
professionals, and fighters, and whose voice has been continuously
suppressed in the post-war situation of Bangladesh. The book follows a
postmodern approach to evaluate the ethnographic metanarratives in the
forms of ethnographic fictions, oral history, interview, and memoirs in
order to challenge women's neglected place in the historical grand
narratives of the 1971 war.