Rewriting History through Women's Voices: A Postcolonial Feminist Reading of Shafak's Historical Narratives
Abstract
This study examines how Elif Shafak rewrites history through women's voices by employing a postcolonial feminist lens to reinterpret silenced or marginalized female experiences. Shafak's historical narratives challenge patriarchal and colonial structures that have traditionally shaped collective memory. Through her novels, she foregrounds women who navigate displacement, religious tensions, cultural hybridity, and political violence, offering alternative perspectives often absent from mainstream historiography. By weaving personal stories into broader historical events, Shafak reveals how a woman’s emotional, spiritual, and social realities contribute to a fuller understanding of the past. This paper argues that Shafak's work functions as a literary reclamation of women's agency, transforming them from passive subjects of history into active narrators who reshape cultural identity and memory. The study highlights how her storytelling not only critiques dominant power structures but also recovers forgotten voices, ultimately presenting history as a dynamic, multi-layered space enriched by female narratives.
How to Cite This Article
Dr. Rana Ahmad Shaheed As-Sadiqi Al-Khalidi, Muhammad Rizwan, Kanwal Sajjad (2026). Rewriting History through Women's Voices: A Postcolonial Feminist Reading of Shafak's Historical Narratives . International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research and Growth Evaluation (IJMRGE), 7(1), 173-180. DOI: https://doi.org/10.54660/.IJMRGE.2026.7.1.173-180