“Becoming Visible”: Civil Society of Modern Iran in the Focus of Gender Discussion
Table of contents
Share
QR
Metrics
“Becoming Visible”: Civil Society of Modern Iran in the Focus of Gender Discussion
Annotation
PII
S013038640021364-8-
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Anna Ardashnikova 
Affiliation: Lomonosov Moscow State University
Address: Russian Federation, Moscow
Tamara Konyashkina
Affiliation: Lomonosov Moscow State University
Address: Russian Federation, Moscow
Edition
Pages
236-247
Abstract

In this study the author examines the main stages and social characteristics of the women's rights movement in republican Iran, which has generated an active controversy between the authorities and the society over the last three decades. This polemic disagreement was triggered by the legal status of the Iranian woman enshrined in the Constitution. Human rights activists with significant religious and social status, insisting on the right of Muslim women to be represented in the highest echelons of state power, were the first to join the debate. At the turn of the 1990s and 2000s, this initiative was taken up by secular activists advocating civil and individual rights for Iranian women. All have made extensive use of a specialised, women-oriented press and, since the early 2000s, the Internet and social media, as well as NPOs/NGOs existing in different regions of the country, in their struggle. Acting along the same lines of the women's rights movement, secular and religious activists represent autonomous segments of civil society. The content of the print and electronic media, television programmes and literary works, used for the first time as a source for the study, forms the basis of the research.

Keywords
Iran, Ayatollah Khomeini, Ayatollah Mutahhari, Ali Shariati, gender, hijab, women's rights movement, Constitution, women's prose, press, Islam, civil rights, human rights movement, NGOs, social media
Received
04.11.2022
Date of publication
28.02.2023
Number of purchasers
16
Views
421
Readers community rating
0.0 (0 votes)
Previous versions
S013038640021364-8-1 Дата внесения правок в статью - 10.03.2023
Cite   Download pdf

References

1. Ahmadi Horasani N. Vzglyad iznutri. Perevodnaya seriya Partnerstva zhenshchin vo imya obucheniya [A look from within. Translation Series of Women's Partnerships for Learning]. [S.l., s.a.]. (In Russ.)

2. Malushkov V.G., Hromova K.A. Poiski putej reformacii v islame: opyt Irana [Searching for ways of reformation in Islam: the experience of Iran]. Moskva, 1991. (In Russ.)

3. Mutahkhari M. Pravovoj status zhenshchiny v islame [The legal status of women in Islam] / per. s pers., primech. M. Mahshulova. Sankt-Peterburg, 2010. (In Russ.)

4. Parsipur S. Zhenshchiny bez muzhchin [Women without men] / per. s farsi Yu. Sadykovoj. [S.l.], 2020. (In Russ.)

5. Repina L.P. ZHenshchiny i muzhchiny v istorii: novaya kartina evropejskogo proshlogo [Women and men in history: a new picture of the European past]. Moskva, 2002. (In Russ.)

6. Satrapi M. Vyshivki (graficheskij roman) [Embroideries. Graphic novel]. Sankt-Peterburg, 2020. (In Russ.)

7. Zdravomyslova E.A., Temkina A.A. Social'noe konstruirovanie gendera [Social construction of gender] // Sociologicheskij zhurnal [Sociological Journal]. 1998. № 3/4. S. 171–182. (In Russ.)

8. Abrahamian E. Iran between Two Revolutions. Princeton, 1982.

9. Alavi N. We aшre Iran. Washington, 2005.

10. Faris D., Rahimi B. Social Media in Iran: Politics and Society after 2009. New York, 2015.

11. Hendelman-Baavur L. Promises and Perils of Weblogistan: Online Personal Journals and the Islamic Republic of Iran // Middle East Review of International Affairs. 2007. Vol. 11. № 2. P. 77–93.

12. Honarbin-Holliday Mehri. Becoming Visible in Iran. London; New York, 2008.

13. Iran in the 20 century. Historiography and Political Culture / ed. T. Atabaki. New York, 2009.

14. Kadivar J. Women and Executive Power // Women, Power and Politics in 21st Century Iran. London, 2012. P. 121–136.

15. Keddie N.R. Roots of Revolution. An Interpretive History of Modern Iran. New York, 1981.

16. Mir-Abidini Ḥ. The History of Female Storywriters // Iran Chamber Society Online Magazine. URL: https://www.iranchamber.com/literature/articles/history_female_storywriters.php (access date: 06.04.2022).

17. Moaveni Azadeh. Lipstick Jihad: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America and American in Iran. New York, 2005.

18. Nafisi A. Reading Lolita in Tehran. New York, 2003.

19. Paidar P. Women and the Political Process in Twentieth Century. Cambridge, 1997.

20. Pirzad Z. Adat mikonim [We are getting used]. Tekhran, 2004. (In Persian)

21. Pirzad Z. Mesl-e hame-je asrha [As all the evenings]. Tekhran, 1991. (In Persian)

22. Sedghi H. Women and Politics in Iran. Veiling, Unveiling, and Reveiling. New York, 2007.

23. Shariati A. Zan: Fateme Fateme ast [Woman: Fatima is Fatima]. Tekhran, 2000. (In Persian)

24. Talattof K. The Politics of Writing in Iran: a History of Modern Persian Literature. Syracuse; New York, 2000.

25. Vakil S. Women and Politics in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Action and Reaction. London; New York, 2011.

Comments

No posts found

Write a review
Translate