Feminist Revolution in Iran: Reflections on Year One

Bahareh Badiei, Kiana Karimi, N. of the Begoo Collective, and Fatemeh Shams, moderated by Manijeh Moradian
Sep 22, 2023 | 6:00pm
Panel Discussion
BCRW Conference Room, 6th Floor, Milstein Center, Barnard College
Co-Sponsors: The Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Barnard College

Feminists for Jina-NYC invites you to an evening of reflection on the first year of an unfolding feminist revolution in Iran. Triggered by the September 16, 2022 murder in police custody of a young Iranian Kurdish woman, Jina (Mahsa) Amini, a multiethnic uprising led by young women and girls quickly swept across Iran, gaining widespread support from many men. For the first time, explicitly feminist demands for women’s bodily autonomy from the state and for gender and sexual equality in all aspects of life was at the center of a movement that called for the overthrow of the Islamic Republic. Marginalized ethnic and religious populations, as well as queer and trans Iranians, have been at the forefront of this uprising. The Iranian state has responded with tremendous brutality, killing hundreds of protesters in the streets, arresting thousands, torturing prisoners, and carrying out official executions. Yet, the protests, reflecting broader social and cultural transformations, continue in different forms, including in daily acts of mass civil disobedience in which women refuse to wear mandatory hijab. 

Please join us for a wide-ranging discussion with Bahareh Badiei, Kiana Karimi, N. of the Begoo Collective, and Fatemeh Shams, moderated by Manijeh Moradian. These activists, scholars and artists have been involved in building transnational feminist solidarity and who will talk about the impact of the women, life, freedom (jin, jiyan, azadi) movement on Iranian society, on the Iranian diaspora, and on their own lives. 

About the Speakers

Bahar(eh) Badiei is a Ph.D. student in the Journalism and Media Studies Department. Her research interests include feminist media theory, dialectics of digital activism, and the MENA region. Her work, in particular, examines how transitional diasporic projects for and about Iranian women may simultaneously reproduce imperialist practices and contribute to neo-Orientalism while rupturing the violence of such agendas and opening spaces for genuine maneuvers of feminism. She seeks to produce public-facing knowledge that disturbs the simplified mediation of MENA region women. Before her immigration to the US, she completed her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in Communication Studies in Iran and worked as a freelance journalist. In her second master’s degree in the US, her research focused on the ways in which the Muslim Ban influenced the possibility of transnational familyhood for US-based Iranian students.

Kiana Karimi is a PhD candidate in Performance Studies and a doctoral fellow at the Urban Democracy Lab at New York University. Her dissertation research focuses on the micropolitics of everyday life and the performance of gender in Iran. Her research interests include digital humanities, gender politics, the performance of everyday life, performance philosophy, immigration and transnational identity, and the Iranian diaspora. She has directed a series of digital publications for the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) and has moderated and taught online workshops for women in small towns in Iran about tools and techniques for participation in the city council elections. Combining her background in engineering, web design and her decade-long experience as a women’s rights activist, she has developed the first-ever eyewitness reporting and networking platform for Farsi speakers (TribuneZamaneh.com) as an alternative to commercial and insecure platforms such as Facebook. As part of Barzan Gender in Translation Program, she has translated over 30 journal papers from English to Farsi in an accessible language for grassroots activists. For her fellowship at the Urban Democracy Lab, she is developing a digital archive to showcase the music and musicians of the Bronx for the Bronx Music Heritage Center. Her writings have been published the London Review of Books Blog, Women Learning Partnership, RadioZamaneh (fa) and We Change (fa) among other outlets.

Manijeh Moradian is assistant professor of Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Barnard College, Columbia University. Her book, This Flame Within: Iranian Revolutionaries in the United States, was published by Duke University Press in December 2022 She has published widely including in American Quarterly, Journal of Asian American Studies, The Scholar & Feminist Online, and Women’s Studies Quarterly. She is a founding member of the Raha Iranian Feminist Collective and on the editorial board of the Jadaliyya.com Iran Page. She is a member of Feminists for Jina, a global network which formed in fall 2022 to support the women, life, freedom uprising in Iran.

N. of the Begoo Collective

A collective of Iranian feminists inside and outside of Iran, Begoo Collective is invested in cultivating a transnational dialogue, particularly among the people of the Global South, in solidarity with the uprising of the Iranian people, especially Womxn, the LGBTQ+, and all marginalized communities. Centering JIN JÎYAN AZADÎ (Woman, Life, Freedom) and in a fight against systemic historical erasure, through a feminist, anti-colonial, and transnational lens. Begoo Collective strives to amplify the Iranian people’s acts of bravery and resistance and to archive the violence and oppression their bodies continue to endure.

Dr. Fatemeh Shams is associate professor of Persian literature at University of Pennsylvania.. She earned her Ph.D in Middle Eastern Studies from University of Oxford, Wadham College. Before joining Penn, she has taught Persian language and literature in various academic institutions including University of Oxford, University of SOAS and Courtauld Institute of Art in the United Kingdom. Shams is currently the Humboldt Foundation-EUME fellow hosted by Forum Transregionale Studien in Berlin in 2021-2024 to work her second book project on the work and life of exiled Iranian poets. She is the author of A Revolution in Rhyme: Poetic Co-option Under the Islamic Republic (Oxford University Press, 2021) and award-winning, internationally recognized collections in Persian and English, including 88 (Berlin: Gardoon, 2012), which won the Jaleh Esfahani Poetry Award in London, UK, and her third bilingual collection, When They Broke Down the Door (Washington: Mage Publisher, 2015), translated by the world-famous British literary scholar, translator and poet, Dick Davis, which won the Latifeh Yarshater Book Award in 2016. Aside from from her academic and literary activities, Fatemeh has been an outspoken feminist activist during the fifteen years that she has lived in exile since the aftermath of the 2009 presidential election and the Green Movement. 

Accessibility

ASL Interpretation will be provided. For additional accessibility needs please email skreitzb@barnard.edu

This is an in-person event, free and open to all. Please review our COVID safety guidelines. Registration is preferred.