Gita Hashemi on Sun, 26 Jul 2009 10:54:25 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Left is wrong on Iran |
dabashi is not on my priority reading list, so i will not address his writing or the critiques of it that have been posted on this list. it's fairly common that at moments like this certain individuals strive to be in limelight at any cost. that should not cloud the judgement passed on the dynamics that are much larger and more significant than any individual. so many discussions about iran are driven by complete lack of knowledge about what is actually happening on the ground. people are focused on the media circus and celebrity or celebrity-want-to-be writers of one stripe or another. we'd get a better sense of the reality if we were to familiarize ourselves with the grass roots voices in iran. after all, a movement is ultimately defined by their work, or should be. and, please make no mistake, long before the recent media spectacle, these activists have been building the ground - discourses and networks - on which stands what we see today. that has been no easy feat after the terrors and massacres in the 1980s and then in 1999. on the subject of foucault and iran, i suggest the following: janet afary and kevin anderson's 2005 book, "foucault and the iranian revolution; gender and the seductions of islamism", a very worthy assessment fully historically substantiated by a key iranian historian gita hashemi, 2000, "between parallel mirrors: foucault, atoussa and me, on sexuality of history" available at http://strictlypersonal.net/pdfs/GitaHashemi_ParallelMirrors.pdf for the records, in my view, there remains a significant difference between foucault and zizek: foucault was in some contact with iranian islamic dissidents in france and did take the trouble to go to iran, 3 times if i remember correctly in 1978-79. so his writing was at least infused with his own direct - albeit very limited and ahistorical - observations. with regards to his iran writing, i respect him for that. zizek is talking on the basis of ... wait, what is it exactly that gives him the qualification to speak about iran? direct observation? historical research? ... i'm at a loss here. but not surprised at all. it's very common to see many white male intellectuals - and, as we've seen, their non-white 'native' counterparts - to speak when they should be listening and learning. humility is not the common currency in the star-studded academy. be well. gita # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org