Afghanistan : a distant war / Robert Nickelsberg ; foreword by Jon Lee Anderson ; with contributions by Ahmad Nader Nadery, Steve Coll, Ahmed Rashid, Tim McGirk, Masood Khalili.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Munich ; London ; New York : Prestel, ©2013.Description: 183 pages : color illustrations, map, portraits ; 30 cmISBN:- 9783791348650
- 3791348655
- DS371.412. N53 2013
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monograph | Afghanistan Centre at Kabul University | DS371.412.N53 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3ACKU000377498 |
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DS371.412.M57 2012 Mission Uruzgan : | DS371.412.M86 2012 U.S. military information operations in Afghanistan : | DS371.412.N48 2008 Special operations forces in Afghanistan / | DS371.412.N53 2013 Afghanistan : | DS371.412.O43 2010 Toughing it out in Afghanistan / | DS371.412.P378 2016 A kingdom of their own : | DS371.412.P477 2015 Toppling the Taliban : |
Also available in Dari language.
Contents: A Cold War ending—A land without law—Warlords, intriguers, spies—The Taliban ascendant—America’s Afghan war.
Summary: Noted documentary photographer Robert Nickelsberg’s photographs help bring into focus the day-to-day consequences of war, poverty, oppression, and political turmoil in Afghanistan. Since the attack on the World Trade Center, Afghanistan has evolved from a country few people thought twice about to a place that evokes our deepest emotions. TIME magazine photographer Robert Nickelsberg has been publishing his images of this distant yet all too familiar country since 1998, when he accompanied a group of Mujahideen across the border from Pakistan. This remarkable volume of photographs is accompanied by insightful texts from experts on Afghanistan and the Taliban. The images themselves are captioned with places, dates, and Nickelsberg’s own extensive commentary. Timely and important, the book serves as a reminder that Afghanistan and the rest of the world remain inextricably linked, no matter how much we long to distance ourselves from its painful realities.
English