Women of Iran: Gender, Politics, and Social Change
MTA
From Qajar salons to digital activism — unlocking women's roles in Iran's past and present
2nd Edition
*Women of Iran: Gender, Politics, and Social Change* offers a comprehensive historical and sociological analysis of women’s central roles in shaping Iranian modernity. The book moves from the conversational Qajar salons and the Constitutional Revolution of 1906 through the Pahlavi era’s state-mandated modernization, which included the controversial forced unveiling of 1936 and the landmark Family Protection Laws of the 1960s and 70s. By tracing these shifts, the text illustrates how women transitioned from the private sphere into formal education, the labor market, and organized political associations, establishing a foundation for collective agency that persisted despite shifting governmental ideologies.
The narrative shifts to the 1979 Islamic Republic, detailing the systematic rollback of legal protections and the re-imposition of compulsory veiling. However, the book highlights a paradox: while the state sought to re-Islamize the public sphere, the exigencies of the Iran-Iraq War and a subsequent boom in female education created new avenues for public participation. The 1990s witnessed the rise of "Islamic feminism" and a vibrant women’s press that used religious jurisprudence to argue for reform from within. This intellectual movement complemented a growing presence in cinema, literature, and NGOs, where women navigated censorship to articulate complex identities and challenge patriarchal constraints.
In the digital age, the focus evolves toward networked mobilizations, starting with the 2009 Green Movement and escalating through viral hashtag campaigns like "My Stealthy Freedom." The text examines the "visual politics" of the female body, where everyday resistance to dress codes and stadium bans transformed personal choices into profound political statements. It also emphasizes an intersectional approach, acknowledging how ethnicity, geography, and class shape the diverse experiences of Kurdish, Baluchi, and Azeri women, whose struggles for gender equality are often braided with demands for regional and cultural recognition.
The final chapters culminate in an analysis of the "Woman, Life, Freedom" uprisings of 2022. This movement is presented as a synthesis of decades of activism, uniting disparate social groups under a revolutionary banner of bodily autonomy and systemic change. Looking toward the future, the book evaluates various horizons for reform, from incremental legislative adjustments to radical constitutional re-imaginings. Ultimately, the work concludes that the pursuit of gender justice in Iran is inseparable from the broader quest for democratic accountability, driven by a resilient and technologically savvy generation of women.
MixCache.com
View booksMarch 15, 2026
40,740 words
2 hours 51 minutes
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