In this episode, we had a wonderful conversation with Rauan on the question of why women’s reading and education are still something that needs to be debated at all. Our discussion moves across two intertwined dimensions: the present and history. We reflect, argue, and think aloud together.
In the present, we ask:
- What do we actually mean by education?
Is it credentials, discipline, social mobility, or the right to reflect, choose, and think freely?
- How is women’s education experienced and imagined within Kazakh social contexts — through personal stories, everyday observations, and critical reflections?
- What kinds of visible and invisible obstacles continue to shape women’s access to education today — within families, relationships, workplaces, and social expectations?
Although education is often described as universally accessible, women’s access to knowledge, information, and lived experience has always been conditional. Reading, paradoxically, remains one of the most accessible paths to freedom precisely because it is ordinary.
We also reflect on a persistent double standard:
> When women seek freedom, it is seen as unnatural.
> When women want to read, it becomes a social “problem” that demands justification.
> Meanwhile, men’s freedom, ambition, and dedication to study or work are treated as self-evident.
Historically, we turn to examples from Central Asia and the Middle East, discussing how women’s education has developed under constraint, negotiation, and resistance. These histories reveal that debates about women’s reading have never been merely about literacy — they are deeply tied to power, equality, and the boundaries of freedom.
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[This episode hosts]
Dina; Aigerim
[About Kazakh Women Voice]
Kazakh Women Voice is a character dialogue program focusing on Kazakh women. We use multiple languages to weave the lives of Kazakh women. We explore the growth process, difficulties and troubles of Kazakh women. We want to hear more voices of Kazakh women and expand our boundaries. Kazakh Girls Club welcomes you.
Illustration: Didar;
Editor: Aigerim;
Layout: Aigerim;
INS:kazakh_women_voice
Email: [email protected]
[email protected]