‘This is an important, incisive book with great depth and range, which provides new insights into equality, gender and self in the pioneering work of Pakistani women poets including Ada Jafri, Zehra Nigah, Fahmida Riaz, Kishwar Naheed and Sara Shagufta, also placing them within the history of Urdu women's poetry and progressive literature.’— Muneeza Shamsie, Independent scholarEssential reading for anyone interested in South Asian literature, gender studies, and postcolonial politics, Gender, Sexuality and Feminism in Pakistani Urdu Writing is a profound reminder of the power of literature to transcend boundaries and give voice to the marginalized. It illuminates the ways in which these poets used their craft to challenge dominant narratives and advocate for social justice, making it a significant contribution to both literary scholarship and feminist discourse. —Ananke MagazineYaqin’s book is remarkable in the sheer clarity of its overall scope.[...] It is an important academic contribution to Urdu literary studies, as well as to the South Asian Studies discipline.—DawnAmina Yaqin’s textured discussion of female sexuality in Urdu poetry by women poets in post-Partition Pakistan is a welcome addition to the scholarly study of women’s poetry in Pakistan, a subject that has, for reasons beyond comprehension, earned much less attention in the Anglophone world than it deserves. —Critical Pakistan StudiesThis book is an important contribution for researchers exploring South Asian feminist voices as an alternative and rarely explored resource. —Southeast Asian Review of EnglishFor scholars of literature and feminism, this book is a landmark contribution. But for poets – especially budding female poets – this book is proof that language can be reclaimed, that voices can carve out their own spaces even in the most hostile of terrains. It is a reminder that poetry, at its best, does not just describe the world. It changes it. —Wasafiri