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Showing posts from August, 2024

Woman, Life, Freedom: Revolting Space Invaders in Iran

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A group of Iranian schoolgirls protest in the classroom while removing their compulsory hijab. Covering her face, one holds a sign which reads: Zan, Zendegi, Azadi [Woman, Life, Freedom]. Photograph: Morning Star, 2023. Woman, Life, Freedom: Revolting Space Invaders in Iran By Mahsa Alami Fariman and Ahmadreza Hakiminejad This article was penned in response to an invitation to write for a Special Issue entitled 'Revisiting Space Invaders'. The article was first published online in  European Journal of Cultural Studies  in August 2024.    Synopsis In marking 20 years since the first publication of Nirmal Puwar's seminal book ' Space Invaders: Race, Gender and Bodies Out of Place ', we've revisited the notions of invisibility, outsiderness, being ‘out of place’ and ‘space invaders’ within the political geographies of Iran. Furthering the concept, we also tend to pair together ‘space invaders’ with the acts of invading space as political acts of intervention.

Special Issue: Woman, Life, Freedom: The Sounds of A Revolution (darkmatter Journal, Issue 17, 2024)

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  Cover image of the Special Issue, darkmattter, 2024. Illustration by Marjan Vafaeian, 2023. Woman, Life, Freedom: The Sounds of A Revolution Edited by Mahsa Alami Fariman and Ahmadreza Hakiminejad / published by  darkmatter Journal  (Issue 17, 2024). This Special Issue was inspired by, and reflected on the public engagement event  Woman, Life, Freedom: The Sounds of A Revolution  the editors had co-organised last year which took place at Coventry Cathedral in Coventry, UK on May 20, 2023. This free and non-profit public event was part of an Action Research carried out by the editors in collaboration with the Centre for Feminist Research of Goldsmiths University of London; Centre for the Study of Women and Gender; Centre for Interdisciplinary Methodologies; and Sustainable Cities Global Research Priorities of the University of Warwick.    Please see the full Issue here via  darkmatter website . 

Digital Space and Feminist Politics in Iran: Archival Methodologies of Sound

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Screenshot from the sound piece  Woman, Life, Freedom: The Sounds of A Revolution  (2023), produced by Mahsa Alami Fariman, Ahmadreza Hakiminejad, and Duncan Whitley. Digital Space and Feminist Politics in Iran: Archival Methodologies of Sound By Mahsa Alami Fariman & Ahmadreza Hakiminejad   This work was presented as part of  Gender in Crisis Workshop 2024  (organised by Gender Urban Research Collective), held at Utrecht University, Netherlands, 3-5 July 2024. Synopsis In the light of the recent women-led mobilisations in Iran which have mushroomed after the state killing of a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman, Mahsa Jina Amini, we, the authors, in collaboration with British filmmaker and sound artist Duncan Whitley , have co-produced a multi-media sound work, entitled ‘ Woman, Life, Freedom; The Sounds of A Revolution ’, tries to depict the Iranian women’s struggle against the tyrannical establishment of the Iranian regime since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. In so doing, eleven

The Rise and Fall of An Oil City: A Sociological (Hi)story of Abadan

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  ‘Abadan — the Fruit of British Industry that Persia Covets.’ Illustrated London News, 8 September 1951. Cited in Damluji, 2013.  The Rise and Fall of An Oil City: A Sociological (Hi)story of Abadan By Ahmadreza Hakiminejad and Mahsa Alami Fariman    Synopsis In 1909, the London-based Anglo-Persian Oil Company was born and by 1912, the liquid began to flow in the pipeline from the oil fields of Masjed Soleyman to what was yet to become the world’s largest oil refinery on the desert island of Abadan; putting a deprived Iranian village on the map. In this paper, we tend to depict a contested sociological portrayal of the oil city of Abadan, through literature, poetry, film, oral history and archival methods. This piece aims to tell a social (hi)story of ‘the oil town’ from its colonial past to its post-revolutionary present.  ------------------------------- This work was presented as part the panel 'Histories of Oil Cities' in  Petrocultures 2024: Oil Cities and Post-Oil Citie