Born in 1967 Ahvaz, Iran, became war displaced when Iraq invaded in 1980, immigrated to the US in 1984, and after working 27 jobs is now a history professor.
Feminist in training:
My nine-year old who just spent two months in Iran drew this today. Note the caption in the bubbles at the bottom: One protestor asks the other, "What do we do?", and the other protestor responds: "I don't know." A question that I'm dumbfounded to answer.
Iranian Women and Gender in the Iran-Iraq War (Syracuse University Press, 2021) received honorable mention in the biennial competition for the Latifeh Yarshater Award. Thank you, Persian Heritage Foundation!
Mateo Mohammad Farzaneh (@mateobooktalks), Iranian Women and Gender in the Iran-Iraq War (New Texts Out Now) #Iran https://t.co/DIsXGs4ryD via @jadaliyya
Excited to read Mateo Mohammad Farzaneh's IRANIAN WOMEN & GENDER IN THE IRAN-IRAQ WAR which has gotten a rave review at the Journal of Middle East Women's Studies: https://t.co/gSwFqbovwx
Consequences of the Iran-Iraq War. Do you know? It's more than you can imagine.
See this Instagram video by @roqemedia https://t.co/pQlOsfjOjI #iran#iraq#WomensTitle
My @meforum review of @mateobooktalks's "Iranian Women and Gender in the Iran-Iraq War," an excellent new book which adds substantively to gender and #Iran scholarship:
https://t.co/Ozy3iByHgI
@AEIfdp