Unveiling the subaltern : an investigation through recent Iranian women's writing /

Files

Date

2024

Authors

Tajalli, Maedeh

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

thesis

Citation

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

Iranian women’s self-consciousness and criticism of their subaltern situation faced censorship under both the Pahlavi and Islamic regimes. Post-Islamic revolution, censorship focused on women’s sexuality, while the Pahlavi era saw indirect suppression via the concept of haya. Female authors addressed these themes through literature. This thesis examines A Persian Requiem by Simin Daneshvar, My Bird by Fariba Vafi, and Things We Left Unsaid by Zoya Pirzad to explore protagonists’ self-consciousness and veiled expressions of sexuality. Daneshvar integrates Sufi mysticism to highlight resistance. Vafi critiques misogynist laws using metaphors and imagery. Pirzad explores sexuality and unity among subaltern women, criticising Armenian marginalisation. Using postcolonial, subaltern, and affect theories, this analysis uncovers how these authors circumvent patriarchal censorship.

School/Discipline

University of South Australia. UniSA Creative.
UniSA Creative

Dissertation Note

Thesis (PhD(Communication))--University of South Australia, 2024.

Provenance

Copyright 2024 Maedeh Tajalli

Description

1 ethesis (vi, 230 pages)
Includes bibliographical references (pages 210-228)

Access Status

506 0#$fstar $2Unrestricted online access

Rights

License

Grant ID

Published Version

Call number

Persistent link to this record