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2022, Counterpunch
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8 pages
1 file
A Feminist Revolution in Iran? https://www.counterpunch.org/2022/09/30/a-feminist-revolution-in-iran/
The New Arab, 2023
Sama Khosravi Ooryad explains that even amidst the resurfacing of violent sate repression that is reminiscent of what was meted out by the regime during the 80s, the people will not be deterred from fighting on.
"Woman, life, and freedom": Will Iran become the first social democratic feminist Revolution in history overthrowing Islamist patriarchy? , 2022
Wahid Azal © "Woman, life, and freedom": Will Iran become the first social democratic feminist Revolution in history overthrowing Islamist patriarchy?
Afriche Orienti, 2022
In this article, we reconsider the history and politics of Iranian feminism(s) in the light of the recent Woman Life Freedom uprising. We take this opportunity to reflect on the potentialities and weaknesses of decade-long engagements with feminism in Iran, highlighting a reluctance to commit to an intersectional analysis able to stream how economic and political hierarchies govern classed and racialised, not only gendered, bodies in different ways; and reflecting on movement-building strategies. To do so, the paper draws attention to two aspects of contemporary political work. First, we examine social media activism and its role in empowering or disempowering a politics of freedom. Second, we draw attention to dispersed forms of activism, based on affective connection between women and "everyday forms of resistance". While we believe that everyday resistance is meaningful, we also emphasise the dangers of becoming content with awareness advancements only, while lacking a strong movement-building strategy. In conclusion, we put Iranian feminism and its intellectual production in dialogue with broader internationalist struggles for liberation and freedom.
In Iran with the electing of the new Iranian leader in 2005 there has been active repression of women movements that promoted equal women's rights in Iran.
It is about some instances of Iranians women's repression and the use of the internet how the Iranian women used to promote the right to expression and association, and the use of cultural practices for subordination.
2008
Immediately after the overthrow of the Reza Shah Pahlavi by a popular movement in 1979, the new Islamic regime introduced a series of discriminatory laws, annulling the meagre rights that women had secured in the previous seventy-five years. This was done despite the massive participation of women in the revolution bringing about the newly established regime. Although there was some protest on the part of middle class women, mostly in Tehran, the unbelievably discriminatory laws were passed with ease. Among other things, the value of women’s lives legally became half that of men; two women witnesses became equal to one man; women were banned from becoming judges; and a notoriously misogynistic orthodox Muslim family law was introduced (Paidar 1995, Hoodfar 1998). All this indicated that while women had acted as political agents, the regime’s leaders were not politicized regarding the specific concerns of women.1 This realization became the starting point and a building block for tho...
Revue Des Mondes Musulmans Et De La Mediterranee, 2010
... La crise de représentation est liée à au moins trois présuppositions majeures et aux programmes d'action subséquents ... Fatemeh Sadeghi , « Bypassing Islamism and Feminism: Women's Resistance and Rebellion in Post-revolutionary Iran », Revue des mondes musulmans et ...
Feminist Review #102, 2012
Lila Abu-Lughod asks a pivotal question for today's intellectual in her article, Do Muslim Women Really Need Saving?: Anthropological Reflections on Cultural Relativism and Its Others. Namely, is it necessary to save the Muslim woman of today? Is the society of one culture better than another? In Abu-Lughod's article, she focuses mainly on this question with respect to the Afghani women and the 'War on Terror' (Abu-Lughod, 783). It is necessary to explore the situation of women in other countries in order to fully formulate an answer. For the purposes of this paper, the country of Iran will be explored. It is, however, with the understanding that the information from Iran is limited. Information available is mainly focused on city dwellers, namely those inside the capital city of Tehran. Information
Women's status and rights in contemporary Iran and thereby the trajectory of Iranian women's activism and feminist movements are paradoxical and complicated. 1 Many factors have shaped this contradictory status, including the patriarchal and patrimonial patterns in Iranian history and culture, be it secular or religious (Islamic), the state policy and state ideology, or the influential ideological or intellectual trends such as nationalism, socialism, Islamism, and more recently liberalism and a human rights framework. Another set of factors, of increased influence in more recent years, has to do with increased processes of globalization and the international currency of the discourses of human/women's rights spreading through transnational feminist activism and new communication technology such as the Internet and satellite TV. Increased globalization has intensified " glocal " dialectic, meaning the interplay of local-national factors with the global-international factors. This chapter provides an overview of the current women's movement and feminism in Iran from a glocal perspective. First, a brief review of the historical background of this movement is presented. Then, to illustrate predominant characteristics of leading feminist activists in Iran, a glance is cast over two prominent women, Sedigheh Dowlatabadi and Shirin Ebadi, who represent different generations of Iranian feminisms. This is followed by a brief discussion on methodological and theoretical issues concerning the women's movement in Iran. Then the trajectory of women's activism after the 1979 Revolution and the ironic and paradoxical aspects of the emergence of a growing women's movement and feminist discourse under an Islamist state are discussed. Special attention is paid to transnational, diasporic, and international interplay with local-national factors such as state policies, oppressive laws, and patriarchal cultural traditions as well as socioeconomic and demographic changes. Historical, Socioeconomic, and Political Contexts The history of Iranian women's quest for equal rights and their collective actions for sociopolitical empowerment dates back to the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In Iran, as in other parts of the world, the women's movement and feminist discourse are by-products of modernity and industrial capitalism. At the same time the women's movement, especially feminism, has provided a challenge to and a critique of the andocentric aspects of modernity. Modernity in Iran and in many other Middle Eastern countries has been associated with Western intrusion, imperialism, or colonialism, thus resulting in mixed feelings, resistance, and nationalistic anti-Western resentment among many women and men.
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