Tag Archives: Sexual Politics in Modern Iran
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Janet Afary
Janet Afary concludes a dialogue with Nawal El Saadawi initiated at Double X earlier this month. Afary is a professor of religious studies and feminist studies at UC Santa Barbara and author of 'Sexual Politics in Modern Iran'. El Saadawi is an Egyptian writer famous for her outspokenness, particularly on the issue of women's rights.
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double X started a really fascinating dialogue between Egyptian writer Nawal El Saadawi and our own Janet Afary, author of Sexual Politics in Modern Iran.
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Here is the two-part video interview of Janet Afary with Riz Khan of Al-Jazeera. They discuss the question: How far could things go in Iran? Afary is author of Sexual Politics in Modern Iran.
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Foreign Policy posted its 8 Books Ahmadinejad Doesn’t Want You to Read yesterday, and coming in at #1: Janet Afary’s Sexual Politics in Modern Iran. Keep track of some of Afary’s recent articles here >>
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With calls for inquiry over Iran's election results, The New York Review of Books looks at 3 books that examine divisions in Iran, among them, Janet Afary's Sexual Politics in Modern Iran.
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Janet Afary
Janet Afary's latest article in The Guardian finds an intriguing trend that adds another dimension to her suspicion that a "sexual revolution" may be on the way for Iran.
Read More
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Janet Afary's Sexual Politics in Modern Iran (Cambridge University Press, March) meticulously details the historical evolution of gender and sexuality, and of the roles and customs of women and same-sexers, from pre-modern Persia (500 to 1500 A.D.) right through the sexual revolution that began in Iran seven decades ago.
Read More
-
Janet Afary
Sexual Politics in Modern Iran author Janet Afary wrote an op-ed piece for yesterday’s Guardian full of fascinating insights into women’s place in modern Iran. Iranian policies over the past couple decades forwarded the position of women in unexpected ways. “the Islamic republic encouraged rural and urban women from more religious sectors to join Islamist […]
Read More
-
Janet Afary
Janet Afary concludes a dialogue with Nawal El Saadawi initiated at Double X earlier this month. Afary is a professor of religious studies and feminist studies at UC Santa Barbara and author of 'Sexual Politics in Modern Iran'. El Saadawi is an Egyptian writer famous for her outspokenness, particularly on the issue of women's rights.
Read More
-
double X started a really fascinating dialogue between Egyptian writer Nawal El Saadawi and our own Janet Afary, author of Sexual Politics in Modern Iran.
Read More
-
Here is the two-part video interview of Janet Afary with Riz Khan of Al-Jazeera. They discuss the question: How far could things go in Iran? Afary is author of Sexual Politics in Modern Iran.
Read More
-
Foreign Policy posted its 8 Books Ahmadinejad Doesn’t Want You to Read yesterday, and coming in at #1: Janet Afary’s Sexual Politics in Modern Iran. Keep track of some of Afary’s recent articles here >>
Read More
-
With calls for inquiry over Iran's election results, The New York Review of Books looks at 3 books that examine divisions in Iran, among them, Janet Afary's Sexual Politics in Modern Iran.
Read More
-
Janet Afary
Janet Afary's latest article in The Guardian finds an intriguing trend that adds another dimension to her suspicion that a "sexual revolution" may be on the way for Iran.
Read More
-
Janet Afary's Sexual Politics in Modern Iran (Cambridge University Press, March) meticulously details the historical evolution of gender and sexuality, and of the roles and customs of women and same-sexers, from pre-modern Persia (500 to 1500 A.D.) right through the sexual revolution that began in Iran seven decades ago.
Read More
-
Janet Afary
Sexual Politics in Modern Iran author Janet Afary wrote an op-ed piece for yesterday’s Guardian full of fascinating insights into women’s place in modern Iran. Iranian policies over the past couple decades forwarded the position of women in unexpected ways. “the Islamic republic encouraged rural and urban women from more religious sectors to join Islamist […]
Read More
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