'I am them and they are me': the transnational body as collective in Iranian women's cinema

Transnational Screens Volume 14, 2023 - Issue 2: Transnational Feminist Approaches to Film and Media from the Middle East and North Africa. https://doi.org/10.1080/25785273.2023.2231776 


Autor: Khosroshahi, Zahra; Film and Television Studies, University of Glasgow, Glasgow,UK; zahra.khosroshahi@glasgow.ac.uk; Linkedin 

Keywords: Transnational cinema, women’s filmmaking, transnational feminism, Iranian cinema, feminist filmmaking. 

Resumen: Women’s bodies have often been used as metonymic, standing for the nation and its ideologies. In exploring both narrative and documentary style filmmaking, I turn to two films: Gilaneh (2006) by Rakhshan Banietemad and A Moon for my Father (2019) co-directed by Mania Akbari and Douglas White. In Gilaneh, Banietemad codifies the maternal to symbolise the nation, but only to subvert and critique the state’s neglect of the forgotten mother. By imagining war beyond the borders of Iran, Banietemad also imagines the mother figure across the nation, giving her international significance. In A Moon for my Father Akbari features her own body and battle with breast cancer. Even in the film’s most intimate moments, Akabri reflects on and connects herself to the women’s movement in Iran. In their conceptualisation of women’s bodies, I argue that both Banietemad and Akbari extend the singular body beyond its national boundaries, calling for and insisting upon an intersectional and collective feminism.

Idioma: Inglés

Publicación: Published online: 17 Jul 2023

Volumen: Transnational Screens, Vol 14, 2023 - Issue 2: Transnational Feminist Approaches to Film and Media from the Middle East and North Africa. 

Enlace Permanente

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario

Nota: solo los miembros de este blog pueden publicar comentarios.