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The Iranian Left and the “Woman Question” in the Revolution of 1978–79
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 April 2009
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The relationship between feminism and socialism in both the theoretical and practical realms has been marked with difficulty and “unhappiness.” Feminists have criticized leftists for their lack of attention to sexual domination, and many socialists, in turn, have looked at women's liberation movements as a bourgeois deviation or, worse yet, a conspiracy against the workers' struggle. In 19th-century social democratic movements in Europe, conflicts between feminist-socialist advocates of women's rights such as Clara Zetkin and “proletarian anti-feminism” among workers and communists were constant. Eventually, guided by the theoretical insights of a number of socialist leaders such as Bebel, Engels, and Zetkin, socialist parties of the First and Second Internationals came to realize that the cause of the women's movement was just and to accept autonomous women's organizations. The Third International, or Comintern, although it initially claimed to liberate women “not only on paper, but in reality, in actual fact,” treated the inequality of women as a secondary consideration. Focusing on production and labor conflict, the Comintern paid attention only to women's exploitation by capital to the extent that “by the end of the 1920s, any special emphasis on women's social subordination in communist propaganda or campaigning came to be regarded as a capitulation to bourgeois feminism.” Leftist women activists lost their organizational autonomy and had to work under the supervision of their national communist party.
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References
NOTES
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35 The Confederation of Iranian Students (National Union) (hereafter referred to as CIS-NU), Nāmeh-ye Pārsā, Vīzhah-e 8 Mars, Rūz-i Beynulmilalī Zanān (Nāmeh-ye Pārsī, Special Issue for March 8th, International Women's Day), 15, 1 (n.d.): 27. This is the special women's issue of the Nāmeh-ye Pārsī, a quarterly published by the CIS-NU. Although produced outside of Iran, the account can be used as a document from within the Iranian leftist movement. First, National Unity was a branch of the confederation that actively supported the guerrilla movement. In that sense, the Nāmeh is the theoretical declaration of a movement that drastically affected the opposition movement. Second, the arguments made by the anonymous authors in the Nāmeh are based on several assumptions that are by and large accepted by the Iranian left.
36 Ibid., 28, 47, 48.
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47 The most developed analysis of “cultural work” in the writings of leftist intellectuals is in the area of engage art; see Behrangi, Samad, “Poetry and Society,” in Critical Perspectives on Modern Persian Literature, ed. Ricks, Thomas M. (Washington, D.C.: Three Continents Press, 1984);Google Scholarulisurkhi, Khusraw, Siyāsat-i Shiʿr, Siyāsat-i Hunar (The Politics of Poetry, the Politics of Art) (written and originally published in 1971) (n.p., n.d.);Google ScholarSulṭānpūr, Saʿīd, Nawʿi az Honor, Nawʿi az Andīshah (One Kind of Art, One Kind of Thought) (originally written in the early 1970s) (n.p., n.d.)Google Scholar.
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58 Ibid., 26.
59 I have discussed this issue elsewhere; see Shahidian, Hammed, “National and International Aspects of Feminist Movements: The Example of the Iranian Revolution of 1978–79,” Critique 2 (1993): 48–49Google Scholar.
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77 There is another reason for the left's style of dress: as one activist commented, “similar to the Hippis in the West, we were rebelling against the dominant culture, against our parents' lifestyle, againstthe capitalist system. So in that respect we were influenced by the progressive movement of the sixties” (telephone interview, 06 1993)Google Scholar.
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89 OIPFG, “Taḥlīli az Iʾtiṣāb-i Kārgarān-i Kārkhānajāt-i Kafsh-i Millī” (An Analysis of the Melly Shoe Factory Workers' Strike), Nabard-i Khalq 3 (1974): 28–35Google Scholar.
90 OIPFG, “Payām-i Sāzimān-i Cherīkʾhā-ye Fadāʾī-ye Khalq-i Īrān bih Munāsebat-i Hifdahum-i Isfand, Rūz-i Jahānī-i Zan” (The Message of OIPFG on the Occasion of Esfand Seventeenth [March Eighth], the International Women's Day), Iʾlāmiyyaʾhā va-Bayāniyyaʾhā-ye Sāzimān-i Charīk'ha-ye Fadāʾī-i Khalq-i Irān dar Sāl-i 1357 (The Leaflets and Statements of OIPFG in 1357) (OIPFG, 1979), 235Google Scholar.
91 For an analysis of similar concerns between reformist and revolutionary approaches to women's rights, see Vogel, Lise, Marxism and the Oppression of Women: Toward a Unitary Theory (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1983), 101–103Google Scholar.
92 See Moghadam, “Socialism or Anti-imperialism?”
93 A similar orientation can be observed in the evaluation of the Iranian revolution by the Communist party of the Soviet Union; see Agaev, S. L., “The Zigzag Path of the Iranian Revolution,” Soviet Sociology 25, 2 (1988): 3–30Google Scholar.
94 See Democratic Organization of Iranian Women (hereafter referred to as DOIW), Zan dar Jāmiʾa-i Irān (Woman in the Iranian Society) (Britain, 1980), 12Google Scholar.
95 DOIW in UK, My Struggle Is My Work (n.p., 1982), 6Google Scholar.
96 Ibid., 7–8.
97 DOIW, Woman in the Iranian Society, 13; see also “Naqsh-i Zan dar Inqilāb” (Women's Role in the Revolution), in DOIW, Asāsnāmeh va-Barnameh (Bylaws and Program) (n.p., n.d.), 15.
98 DOIW, Bylaws and Program, 9.
99 Ibid., 9–10.
100 Ibid., 12.
101 DOIW, Women's Oppression in Iran (n.p., 1984), 3Google Scholar.
102 Peykar, “Pīrāmūn-i Junbesh-i Zanān-i Zaḥmatkesh” (Concerning the Movement of the Toiling Women), part 2, Paykār 94 (16 February 1981): 19Google Scholar.
103 Waters, “In the Shadow of the Comintern,” 40.
104 Moghissi, Haideh wrote: “Very often, when [leftists] write about the sufferings of women under Islamic rule, women are referred to as ‘our mothers,’ ‘our wives’ or ‘our daughters’ and not as women,” from “Women in the Resistance Movement in Iran,” in Women in the Middle East: Perceptions, Realities and Struggles for Liberation, ed. Haleh Afshar (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1993), 163Google Scholar. Moghissi does not specify to which leftist organization she is referring, nor does she cite a source for her claim. I have not come across any example of addressing women other than as “women,” “militant women,” or “toiling women” in my review of the literature.
105 Peykar, “Concerning the Movement of the Toiling Women,” part 3, Paykar 95 (23 02 1981): 23Google Scholar.
106 Ibid., 24.
107 Ibid..
108 See Najjar, “Between Nationalism and Feminism,” 145–48; and Peteet, “Women and the Palestinian Movement,” 23–24.
109 See Sarti, Cynthia, “The Panorama of Feminism in Brazil,” New Left Review 173 (1989): 75–90Google Scholar.
110 Peykar, “Concerning the Movement of the Toiling Women,” part 3. Using long jargon-filled sentences is a stylistic trait of the Iranian left. Statements should say everything and cover all bases at all times. The organization should secure itself against every conceivable attack. A primary purpose of writing, therefore, becomes to state one's position and to inform others of their “deviations.”
111 The Comintern suggested the same relationship between women's organizations and the party; see Waters, “In the Shadow of the Comintern,” esp. 46–50.
112 Stalin, J. V., Concerning Questions of Leninism. Vol. 8, Works (Moscow: Foreign Language Publishing House, 1954), 34Google Scholar.
113 Sonia Kruks and Ben Wisner, “Ambiguous Transformations: Women, Politics, and Production in Mozambique,” in Promissory Notes, 148–71; Amrita Basu, “Democratic Centralism in the Home and the World: Bengali Women and the Communist Movement,” in Ibid., 215–32.
114 OIPFG, “A Brief Review of the Two Years of Women's Democratic Struggle,” 1.
115 Ibid.,5.
116 See Moghissi, “Women in the Resistance Movement in Iran,” 165–68.
117 See National Union of Women, “Aims and Objective,” in In the Shadow of Islam, 204.
118 Ibid., 205.
119 Ibid., 206.
120 DuBois, Ellen Carol, “Women Suffrage and the Left: An International Socialist-Feminist Perspective,” New Left Review 186 (1991): 30Google Scholar.
121 The information presented here is based on my interviews with Fidaʾi women.
122 Supporters of OIPFG–Sistan and Baluchistan, “Gīrāmī Bād Rūz-i Jahānī-i Zan” (Hail to the International Women's Day), Bāmi Istār 28 (March 1984); “Rūz-i Zan, Sālrūz-i Junbesh-i Zanān-i Zaḥmatkesh-i Jahān Gīrāmī Bād” (Commemorate Women's Day, the Anniversary of the Movement of Toiling Women), Bāmi Istār 42, 11 03 1985Google Scholar.
123 Supports of OIPFG–Sistan and Baluchistan, Baluchi Woman, 14.
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