Volume 15 (2023)
Volume 13 (2022)
Volume 12 (2020)
Volume 11 (2019)
Volume 10 (2018)
Volume 9 (2017)
Volume 8 (2016)
Volume 7 (2015)
Volume 6 (2014)
Volume 5 (2013)
Volume 4 (2012)
Volume 3 (2011)
Volume 2 (2011)
Volume 1 (2010)
Research Paper
persuasion cues of women influencers on social networks to create electronic word-of-mouth advertising and purchase intentions

alireza hatami; Seyed Mahdi Sharifi; labafi somayeh

Volume 14, Issue 4 , January 2023, Pages 489-518

https://doi.org/10.22059/jwica.2022.344315.1797

Abstract
  The advent of social networks has brought about changes in various aspects of human life, and marketing is one of the areas that has been affected. With the emergence of influencers with the ability to influence the wide followers in social networks, brands' interest in influencer marketing is growing ...  Read More

Research Paper Art
Intra-Cultural Semiotics of a Combined Bird-with-Female-Head Motif in Metal Rings of the Semiosphere of the Seljuks of Iran

Moeine ossadat Hejazi; Parisa Shad Ghazvini

Volume 14, Issue 4 , January 2023, Pages 519-543

https://doi.org/10.22059/jwica.2022.343422.1793

Abstract
  Human-bird hybrid motifs have broad and sometimes conflicting meanings in many parts of the world. In the Islamic era, despite the prohibition of human and animal motifs, this motif is still used in works such as rings of the Seljuk period with a female-bird nature. The Seljuks were one of the first ...  Read More

Research Paper Art
The Study of “Desire” and “Becoming‌ Woman” in Yerma Through Deleuze and Guattari's Views

Zahra Taheri

Volume 14, Issue 4 , January 2023, Pages 545-564

https://doi.org/10.22059/jwica.2022.342995.1790

Abstract
  This article focuses on the notion of “desire” in Yerma (1934), by Federico Garcia Lorca, the famous Spanish writer and dramatist. Yerma is one of the dramas in Lorca’s ‘rural trilogy’. Adopting the perspective of left thinkers and using Gilles Deluze and Fleix Guattari’s ...  Read More

Research Paper Communications
Critique of social structures in women's fiction 1909-1931

ali Baghdar Delgosha

Volume 14, Issue 4 , January 2023, Pages 565-597

https://doi.org/10.22059/jwica.2022.342496.1787

Abstract
  Critique of social structures in women's fiction 1909-1931AbstractSimultaneously with the publication of the women's press in 1909, conditions were created for women to be able to use new language of expression such as poetry and fiction to express their views in addition to further critique of social ...  Read More

Research Paper Historic
The Functional Tasks of Shiite Women in the Safavid Era in the Structure of Social Action Based on Cybernetic Model Variables

Maryam saeedyan; zahra sadat keshavarz

Volume 14, Issue 4 , January 2023, Pages 599-626

https://doi.org/10.22059/jwica.2022.345326.1807

Abstract
  Cybernetics, social system of action, model variables, transitional, traditional, post-traditional situation, the current research with a documentary strategy and in a descriptive-analytical way, and based on the existing historical data about women in the Safavid era, attempts to redraw the status of ...  Read More

Research Paper Literature
An Investigation of Gender Effects on Students’ Preferences for Literary and Non-literary Strokes

Marzieh imani; Reza Pishghadam; Shima Ebrahimi

Volume 14, Issue 4 , January 2023, Pages 627-652

https://doi.org/10.22059/jwica.2022.341069.1772

Abstract
  A strong, healthy teacher-student connection helps to create an environment conducive to personal and academic progress. Stroke is the point at which a healthy relationship starts to deviate from an unhealthy one in terms of behavior and words. Generally, strokes have been given in a conventional and ...  Read More

Research Paper Art
Iconographichal analysis of the role of women in the mourning paintings and their relationship with agricultural rituals with emphasis on Ilkhanid, Timurid and Safavid paintings

marzieh jafarpour; zohreh tabatabaiie jebeli

Volume 14, Issue 4 , January 2023, Pages 653-677

https://doi.org/10.22059/jwica.2022.344764.1801

Abstract
  What we call death in our dictionary, and which we often refer to bitterly, in the eyes of agriculturists was a connection of the deceased with the earth and the expectation of resurrection; Like a seed buried in the soil in the hope of rebirth. The remaining written and visual pieces of evidence of ...  Read More