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Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2007) 3 (3): 119–123.
Published: 01 November 2007
... . Copyright © 2007 Association for Middle East Women’s Studies 2007 BOOK REVIEWS  119 Sohrabi, Naghmeh 2005 Signs Taken for Wonder: Nineteenth-Century Persian Travel Literature to Europe. Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University...
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Published: 01 July 2020
Figure 3. The souvenirs in BTS Fanclub (Persian Army) offline meeting. More
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2020) 16 (3): 307–325.
Published: 01 November 2020
...Maryam Zehtabi Sabeti Moqaddam Abstract In Iran—as never before in the history of the country—prostitutes gained notorious visibility in twentieth-century Persian literature. Fixation on the image of the prostitute created a wealth of literature beginning in 1924 with the first Persian urban social...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2023) 19 (3): 337–356.
Published: 01 November 2023
...Narges Montakhabi Bakhtvar; Hoda Niknezhad-Ferdos Abstract Women’s bodily experiences, radically stigmatized in Persian culture, have barely been approached in the literature of Iran. However, Rosa Jamali, an eminent postmodern poet in contemporary Iran, mobilizes her poetic palette...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2020) 16 (2): 103–123.
Published: 01 July 2020
... Dowlatabadi and Saniee occupy in the Persian literary field, both Missing Soluch and My Share reflect the ethos of the 1979 Revolution in some way, one its euphoric beginning and the other its complicated aftermath. The article argues that both novelists pursue an innovative genre of historical writing...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2017) 13 (3): 416–437.
Published: 01 November 2017
... of Persian-language television programs, articles and news reports, weblogs, and Facebook posts responding to Ermia reveals how a reality television contestant came to disturb simplistic but powerful binaries of modest/immodest, religious/secular, Iranian/Western, and national/diasporic as she combined...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2015) 11 (1): 24–41.
Published: 01 March 2015
... opportunities for women. Primary sources include major Persian-language biographies that have appeared in Iran over the last thirty years and research from two fieldwork trips. Increased gender challenges are typically attributed to the end of the Iran-Iraq War and the death of Khomeini, leader of the Islamic...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2008) 4 (3): 58–88.
Published: 01 November 2008
..., content, and organization of these schools. The study is based primarily on the memoirs of Iranian educators, the writings of foreign observers in Iran active in Iranian education circles, and Persian-language press sources. Jasamin Rostam-Kolayi is Assistant Professor of History at California State...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2020) 16 (2): 124–143.
Published: 01 July 2020
... been done a disservice in some English translations, where the depiction of domestic abuse in the original Persian language has been minimized. To appreciate the impact of these changes, we must also examine the authors’ choice of specific historical settings. Daneshvar’s Savushun (1969...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2013) 9 (3): 139–142.
Published: 01 November 2013
... and domesticity as neutral tools for regulating social life. Until now, this florescence of scholarship dealing with the Iranian state’s regulation of female and male sexuality has not been accompanied by a similar upsurge in the field of Persian 140  mn  Journal of Middle East women’s studies  9:3...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2014) 10 (3): 136–139.
Published: 01 November 2014
... their communities and across the generations. Soomekh reiterates throughout the book that “Jewishness” shapes all three generations of women. And, as important as national and cultural identity (Persian, Iranian and/or Iranian- American) are to these women, that common thread is a more tenuous...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2005) 1 (3): 125–127.
Published: 01 November 2005
... seventh-century chronicles to the twentieth-century theatre, Baum is thorough in covering his sources. Th e slender book is divided into four sections titled “Persia in Late Antiquity,” “Chosroes II (590-628) and Shirin: Th e Persian Royal Couple,” “Th e Shirin Myth in Literature and Art...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2012) 8 (3): 14–40.
Published: 01 November 2012
..., Farangopolis, in Persian and English in December 2004 and participated in two group weblogs, No War on Iran and Iranians for Peace. My participation in forming these two group weblogs introduced me to more bloggers and soon I became a “resident” of Weblogistan, forging several online...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2021) 17 (2): 220–239.
Published: 01 July 2021
..., it underwent serious censorship, and much of its original content was redacted. In 2017 Molavi self-published the uncensored book on Amazon Publishing, which is the version I use in this study. In the preface of the uncensored book Molavi acknowledges the limited reach posed by a self-published Persian...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2010) 6 (1): 103–116.
Published: 01 March 2010
... (Milani 1992). As a result, for much of its history Iran’s literary tradition belonged almost exclusively to men. But beginning in the 1950s, a new tradition of writing by women emerged in Iran, and it was a development that would completely transform Persian literature in the space of half...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2024) 20 (1): 1–22.
Published: 01 March 2024
.... In contemporary scholarship in the West, they have often been separated through colonial logic and academic boundary making. Iran ends up in the “Middle East” and Afghanistan in “South Asia” or “Central Asia.” This article takes the lead of historians reinvigorating a study of the “Persianate world” (Kia 2020...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2014) 10 (3): 87–108.
Published: 01 November 2014
... to attend the women-only parks rather than the mixed parks, and what advantages or disadvantages they saw in having women-only spaces, such as the Mothers’ Paradise. I also observed how women interacted in the segregated spaces. After each visit, I wrote field notes in Persian, which I...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2013) 9 (3): 142–145.
Published: 01 November 2013
... by Motlagh ought to be taken up with respect to other parts of the Persianate world, including Central Asia and Afghanistan. Motlagh’s literary acumen and conceptual powers make her perspective all the more needful and relevant to the entire Persianate ecumene. Her study of Iranian...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2017) 13 (3): 461–468.
Published: 01 November 2017
... . Tohidi Nayereh . 2016 . “ Goftego-ye Nayereh Tohidi ba filsoof-e feminist amrikayi, Judith Butler ” (“Dialogue of Nayereh Tohidi with American Feminist Philosopher Judith Butler”), translated into Persian by Mandana Zandian. Kharmagas: Nashriyeh falsafi ejtemayi (Gadfly: Persian Journal...
Journal Article
Journal of Middle East Women's Studies (2022) 18 (2): 238–259.
Published: 01 July 2022
... of Persepolis in Satrapi’s narrative, I want to review the history briefly. Persepolis is well known as the capital of the Persian Achaemenid Empire from the reign of Darius I (the Great, r. 522–486 BCE). However, the historical appropriation of Persepolis by the ideology of Aryanism and “dislocative...