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Woman, Life, Freedom and the Question of Normalcy: A Note Toward an Anti-racist Transnational Feminist Lens
Abstract
The #WomanLifeFreedom uprising of 2022 in Iran echoed many voices from the Iranian community on social media and in the streets, some of which strongly challenged the existing feminist scholarship about Iran and its normalizing gaze in incorporating the history of ethnic and sexual minorities in the nation. The death of Mahsa Amini in police custody could be appropriated as a simple anti-veiling protest against the Islamic State. However, her funeral in the Aychi cemetery turned into the site of demonstrations, with Kurdish women taking off their veils and protesters chanting against the Islamic regime, followed by protests in Balochistan province supporting the Kurdish community. These protests bloomed into complicated questions of whether or not "Mahsa was the new George Floyd" and highlighted the urgency of an intersectional analysis of the Iranian women's movement. However, the existing scholarship on the anti-veiling movement barely touches upon the social construction of the unmarked female body and its place in the history of government repression. The Iranian queer community pushed forward the second essential inquiry. Showcasing the hate crimes against this community, not persecuted and sometimes encouraged by the state, the queer community portrays necropolitics as the normal of their lives. Some of the members of this community lost their lives in the middle of protests by honor-killing, executions, and shooting against protesters. Two community members vouge in front of the Iranian Embassy in Ecuador to connect their protests with other queers of color protests since the 1980s. At the same time, queer people demand accountability and address the heteronormativity, exclusion, and invisibility of their lives within Iranian feminist scholarship. While the existing scholarship primarily engages with the "woman's question" and investigates the role of pre and post-revolutionary states in ruling women's bodies, the voices of ethnic and sexual minorities direct us to take a radical intersectional approach to understanding womanhood, the question of whose lives matter and the extent of freedom one can claim. In this presentation, I investigate how these two foundational questions can challenge feminist canons and their heteronormativity. More importantly, I advocate for the urgency of an anti-racist and transnational feminist lens to focus on the absence of different sections of the Iranian community. Finally, I argue that without such a radical epistemic shift, our knowledge production in academia remains only as another site of erasure.
Discipline
Other
Geographic Area
Iran
Sub Area
None