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Azar Nafisi

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Azar Nafisi speaking at the 2004 National Book Festival in Washington D.C.
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Azar Nafisi speaking at the 2004 National Book Festival in Washington D.C.

Azar Nafisi, Ph.D. (Persian: آذر نفیسی) (born December 1955) is an Iranian-born professor and writer who currently resides in the United States.

Nafisi's bestselling book Reading Lolita in Tehran: a Memoir in Books gained a great deal of public attention and it has been translated into 32 languages.

She is currently a Visiting Fellow and lecturer at the Foreign Policy Institute of the Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in Washington, DC.

She is the daughter of Ahmad Nafisi, a former mayor of Tehran, and Nezhat Nafisi, who was among the first women to be elected to the Iranian parliament. Nafisi is married to Bijan Naderi, and has two children, Negar and Dara.

Azar first came to the United States in the last year of her high school career. She continued her studies and received a Ph.D in English and American literature at the University of Oklahoma. She returned to Iran in 1979 where she was a professor of English literature for 18 years at the University of Tehran.

Having witnessed the Iranian revolution and the subsequent rise to power of the Ayatollah Khomeini, Nafisi soon became restless with the many stringent rules imposed upon women by her country's new rulers. Because she had lived in the United States before the revolution in Iran, she appreciated the freedom that women in other countries took for granted, and which women in Iran had now lost.

In 1995, finding herself no longer able to teach English literature properly without attracting the scrutiny of the authorities, she quit teaching at the university, and instead invited seven of her best female students to secretly attend regular meetings at her house, every Thursday morning. They would study literary works considered controversial and even dangerous to read in post-revolutionary Iranian society such as Lolita, Madame Bovary and The Great Gatsby, as well as novels by Henry James and Jane Austen, attempting to understand and interpret them from a modern Iranian perspective.

Nafisi finally left Iran on June 24, 1997, moving to the United States, where she became close friends with Paul Wolfowitz, who introduced her to the writings of Leo Strauss[[Citing sources citation needed]]. Encouraged by Wolfowitz and others to write about her experiences, Nafisi wrote the bestseller Reading Lolita in Tehran: a Memoir in Books, a book where she shares her experiences as a woman living and working under the regime of the Islamic Republic. In the book, she declares "I left Iran, but Iran did not leave me." She also describes life in Iran as "having sex with a man you loathe".

It has been claimed that Nafisi has close relations with neoconservatives.[#endnote_guardian][#endnote_Benador] In the acknowledgements she makes in Reading Lolita in Tehran, she writes of historian Bernard Lewis as "one who opened the door". Lewis is the author of What Went Wrong, a book which has been criticized in academic circles for its sweeping generalisations about the Islamic world, [link] and is also associated with neoconservatism. [#endnote_review]

Works

References

  1.  [Guardian on Azar Nafisi]
  2.  [Benador Associates and Nafisi]
  3.  [About Iranian Memoirs]

External links

 


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