Golbarg Bashi
Golbarg Bashi (Persian: گلبرگ باشی), born in Ahvaz, Iran, is an Iranian-Swedish feminist professor of Iranian Studies at Rutgers University in the US. Among other topics, Bashi has published works and given talks about human rights in the Middle East and the situation of women in Iran. Two of her famous works include, Feminist waves in the Iranian Green Tsunami (2009); From One Third World Woman to Another: A Conversation with Gayatri Spivak (2010) and Eyewitness history: Ayatollah Montazeri (2006).[1][2]
Biography
Golbarg Bashi was born in Iran, raised in Sweden, and educated at the Universities of Manchester and Bristol and obtained her doctorate degree from Columbia University in New York City. Her doctoral research focused on a feminist critique of the human rights discourse in Iran.[1] She teaches courses on methodologies in Middle Eastern Studies, various aspects of gender in the Muslim world and representations of race, gender and ethnicity in “Western” media and popular culture (including cinema and art), medieval and modern Middle Eastern history in the immediate geographical, political, and cultural contexts of the Arab and Muslim world, viewed through postcolonial theory.[3]
Bashi has been a member of the Green Party of Sweden where she was elected in 2002 as an executive member of the party's Women's Committee.[4] She was also selected as a candidate for the Greens in the Swedish municipal elections for the city of Kramfors in 2002.[5]
She is also a visual artist and a member of Professional Women Photographers, Inc. She has published her photographs in the New York Times, Aljazeera English, CNN, BBC News, Amnesty International, Jadaliyya, and Electronic Intifada, etc.[3] She is married to Columbia University professor, Hamid Dabashi.[6]
Brainquake
In April 2010, Golbarg Bashi launched Brainquake together with Duke University's Negar Mottahedeh in response to Boobquake, Jennifer McCreight's reaction to Tehran's leader in Friday Prayer statement that women who wear immodest clothing and behaved promiscuously caused earthquakes. Brainquake was a feminist critical response to this where instead of highlighting one's physical differences from men, women should show off their CVs and lists of accomplishments.[7][8]
See also
- Postcolonial feminism
- Third-world feminism
- Women's rights movement in Iran
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Faculty Profiles - Golbarg Bashi". Rutgers University. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
- ↑ "تصویر ندا آقا سلطان و تکنولوژی دوربین در “زنانه شدن قدرت”". rahesabz. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Program Participants". Fertile Crescent. Institute for Women and Art, Rutgers University. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
- ↑ http://mp.se/templates/template_83.asp?number=63639
- ↑ http://www.val.se/val/val_02/slutresultat/22K/2282/228200.html
- ↑ Brownrigg, Kirsten (April 27, 2010). "Coup de Ta-Tas: Cleric’s comment ignites skin-bearing backlash". Herald de Paris. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
- ↑ Moezzi, Melody (April 26, 2010). "Boobquake and Brainquake: Why Not Both?". MS Magazine. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
External links
Publications
Among other topics, Bashi has published works about the situation of women in Iran.
- From One Third World Woman to Another: A Conversation with Gayatri Spivak, in PBS's Frontline Tehran Bureau (January 2010).
- Picturing Ourselves: 1953, 1979 and 2009: A Conversation with Negar Mottahedeh, in PBS's Frontline Tehran Bureau (July 2009).
- Iranian Feminism after June 2009: A Conversation with Zillah Eisenstein, in PBS's Frontline Tehran Bureau (June, 2009).
- Feminist waves in the Iranian Green Tsunami?, in PBS's Tehran Bureau (June, 2009).
- Genre in the Service of Empire: An Iranian Feminist Critique of Diasporic Memoirs, by Bashi et al., in Znet (January 2007).
- Citizenship Rights in Iran: One Step Forward, Many More to Take.
Staatsbürgerrechte im Iran: Nur ein kleiner Schritt vorwärts German version
تعديل قانون منح الجنسية في إيران:في الطريق إلى المساواة بين المرأة والرجل, in Qantara, Deutsche Welle (September 2006). Arabic version]
- The Proper Etiquette of Meeting Shahrnush Parsipur in the United States, Payvand and The Persian Book Review (ISSUE XVI, NO. 48, FALL 2006).
- A Historic Landmark: Women’s Rights Gathering in Tehran on June 12, in OpenDemocracy and Payvand (July 2006).
- فارسی Eyewitness History: Interview with Ayatollah Montazeri, Payvand (March 2006). [One Million Signatures] .