An Introduction to the History of Women Studies in Archeology

KamalAldin Niknami; MohamadReza Saeedi Harsini; Mariam Dezhamkhoy

Volume 2, Issue 3 , March 2011, Pages 5-17

Abstract
  The present study deals with the developments of archeology in the second half of the twentieth century. Influenced by women freedom movements and the developments in other branches of humanities and social sciences, women studies entered the realm of archeological studies inthis period. The current ...  Read More

Gender and class discriminations from Parvin Etesami’s view

Abolfazl Zolfaghari; Moslem Mirzaei

Volume 2, Issue 3 , March 2011, Pages 19-35

Abstract
  Parvin Etesami is a poet who artistically used Persian poetry in order to criticize the status quo of the society and express its deficiencies. Her Divan (collection of poems), which is her only heritage for us, is teeming with debates, allegories, sarcasms with social themes. This article deals with ...  Read More

Different Methods of Resistance Resorted to by Iranian People against the State Ordinance of Removing Hijab during the First Pahlavi Era

Gholamreza Jamshidiha; Leila Najafianrazavi

Volume 2, Issue 3 , March 2011, Pages 37-56

Abstract
  After Reza Khan took power and established a powerful central government, the way was paved for planning reforms in Iran. Among these reforms was the improvement of the status of women, which tried to make Iran similar to the West. This goal accounts for the removal of hijab and changing the appearance ...  Read More

Religious Myths in the Poems by Palestinian Women

Ezzat Molla Ebrahimi

Volume 2, Issue 3 , March 2011, Pages 57-76

Abstract
  Palestinian woman poets have frequently used mythical concepts, especially those of God's messengers, in their poems, and they have sometimes been inspired by these myths. Although myths have ancient origins, they endow the contemporary poet's thoughts with a deep scope, while, at the same time, the ...  Read More

Religious Myths in the Poems by Palestinian Women

Ezzat Molla Ebrahimi; Seyed Maysam Motahari

Volume 2, Issue 3 , March 2011, Pages 77-96

Abstract
  As a prominent contemporary theory, feminism tries to challenge other fields of study by this question: What do we know about women? This question entails other questions: what is the status of women? How influential are women in these statuses? This article tries to examine and criticise the dramatic ...  Read More

Characterization of Woman in Najib Kilani's Fiction

Salahoddin Abdi; Shahla Zamani

Volume 2, Issue 3 , March 2011, Pages 97-116

Abstract
  Najib Kilani is the first writer dealing with Muslim problems in his stories beyond the boundaries of the Arab world; in his avant-garde novels, such as Turkestan Nights, Jakarta's Virgin, and Giants of the North, which take place in Turkestan, Indonesia, and Nigeria respectively, he deals with these ...  Read More

Examining the Status of Women in the Family and Society in the Sassanian Period

Karim Golshani Rad

Volume 2, Issue 3 , March 2011, Pages 117-131

Abstract
  Many of the contemporary authors and researchers such as C. Bartholomae (the author of the book “Zum sassanidischem Recht”) and Arthur Christensen (the author of the book “Iran in the Sassanian Period”), believe that women had a very bad status in the Sassanian period, being dealt with as slaves ...  Read More