Body in (Over) the City
Body in (Over) the City
Date
2019
Media
Digital print
Binding
Perfect
Format
Artist Book
Dimensions
8 × 10 × 1 in
Pages
41
Location
Iran, New York, NY
Collection
Collection Development, Zines$ 20.00
Unavailable
View Collectors
The British Library
Body in (Over) the City; Setare S. Arashloo; Digitally printed; 6 by 8 3/4 inches; Perfect Bound; 41 pages
Body In(Over) the City is a picture essay that brings together conversations, thoughts, images, and drawings to explore a series of individual protests in Iran known as Girls of Enghelab (Revolution) Street. The book aims to expand the dialogue that The Girls of Enghelab has created about mandatory hijab, and more broadly about body/gender’s relation to urban space. Through conversation with Golrokh Nafisi, Iranian artist, as well as by bringing in notes from different resources which discuss art as a form of social participation, and the daily political life of cities the book explores the Girls of Enghelab’s action as a form of peaceful resistance to power by citizens in public space.
The intersection of politics, feminism, and individuality under authoritarian rule makes the struggles of Iranian women manifold, layered, complex and almost impossible to represent. Therefore this book investigates the dynamics of representation and femininity in contemporary Iran. By this picture essay, I hope to offer a broader perspective on hijab, and compulsory hijab and the protests against it, contrasting the commonplace dichotomy of emancipated women vs. Muslim women with a veil, that pervades western media.