In the Eye of the Storm:
Women in Postrevolutionary Iran
1994 / Syracuse University Press and I.B. Tauris /
Co-edited with Erika Friedl
“This book restores the reader’s faith in the regenerative power of the human spirit, and tells a heart-warming story of courage, resilience, and creative energy.” – Shusha Guppy, The Independent
As soon as the Islamic Republic was firmly established in Iran, the government began to rewrite laws relating to women’s behavior. attempts were made to force women out of the job market, and the veil and other Islamic tenets were enforced in the home, office, and streets. Yet women have constantly challenged the attempt to socialize them into fundamentalist norms and have re-asserted themselves in both the economy and the arts.
This detailed study–the first of its kind to be published in English–transcends the stereotypes and misinformation that often permeate discussions of the condition of Iranian women.
The contributions cover topics such as education, the labor market, temporary marriage, the commoditization of female sexuality, the image of women in literature and film, parliamentary debates on women’s issues, and the strategies used by women to maintain a modicum of control over their own affairs in a male-defined and male-dominated society.
Reviews:
Allah and Freud are against them: Shusha Guppy is fascinated and saddened by a new survey of Iranian women’s livesThe Independent August 6, 1994/ Susha Guppy
Bibliotheca Orientalis LIII No.3/4 mei-augustus 1996 / Willy Jansen
Tags: Iran, Iran Women's Movement

















Sat, Jan 1, 1994
Books