Golbarg Bashi: Difference between revisions

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she was born and partly raised in Iran and spent all her life on Iran. If her teenage life makes her swedish, how about her life in UK and US?!
She was raised in Iran/ only a short time in sweden
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'''Golbarg Bashi''' ({{PerB| گلبرگ باشی}}) is a [[Iran]]ian [[feminist]] [[academic]] and [[human rights]] activist of [[Iran]]ian origin. She was born in [[Ahvaz]], [[Iran]], raised in [[Sweden]] and educated in the British [[Russell Group]] universities of [[University of Manchester|Manchester]] and [[University of Bristol|Bristol]].
'''Golbarg Bashi''' ({{PerB| گلبرگ باشی}}) is a [[Iran]]ian [[feminist]] [[academic]] and [[human rights]] activist. She was born and raised in [[Ahvaz]], [[Iran]]. After her elementary educations, she left Iran and did her high school education in [[Sweden]]. She was educated in the British [[Russell Group]] universities of [[University of Manchester|Manchester]] and [[University of Bristol|Bristol]].


She is a visiting scholar at [[Columbia University]] in [[New York]] where her husband, the noted scholar of Iran and post-colonial theorist, [[Hamid Dabashi]] is also based.
She is a visiting scholar at [[Columbia University]] in [[New York]] where her husband, the noted scholar of Iran and post-colonial theorist, [[Hamid Dabashi]] is also based.

Revision as of 21:29, 27 July 2007

Golbarg Bashi (Template:PerB) is a Iranian feminist academic and human rights activist. She was born and raised in Ahvaz, Iran. After her elementary educations, she left Iran and did her high school education in Sweden. She was educated in the British Russell Group universities of Manchester and Bristol.

She is a visiting scholar at Columbia University in New York where her husband, the noted scholar of Iran and post-colonial theorist, Hamid Dabashi is also based.

Bashi has tackled areas of academic inquiry that include human rights, prevention of torture, Black and Third-world feminisms, postcolonial theory, Iranian women's studies, and the politics of media representation of gender, race and ethics.

She has interviewed the once heir apparent to the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri in the Shi'i heartland city of Qom [1], and is also known for her criticism of "secular fundamentalist" feminists of Iranian origin in Diaspora for their siding with racist policies against Muslims in Europe and North America [2], [3] and for their hatred and counter-offensives against the positive developments of the women's movement inside Iran [4].

Bashi has been a member of the Green Party of Sweden where she was elected in 2002 as an executive member of the party's Women's Committee [5]. She was also selected as a Green candidate in the Swedish municipal elections for the city of Kramfors in 2002 [6].

Writings

See also

External links