Museum of Resistance and Resilience Main MenuPraxis #1: Curation and Annotation (Group Project)details of Praxis #1 assignmentPraxis #1.1 War, Memory, And Identity: Beyond Victims and Voice Museum of Resistance and ResilienceProfessor Marjory Wentworth Honor's Class at College of CharlestonPraxis #2 Media Intervention, Multimedia Essay (Individual Project)Entry 2 in our Museum of Resistance and ResiliencePraxis #3 Manifesto of Future Resistance and ResilienceMedia Intervention/Media PostsFinal Course Reflection - A Letter to the FutureDue November 18Vicki Callahanf68c37bed83f129872c0216fae5c9d063d9e11baLisa Müller-Tredecc71af55f5122020f2b95396300e25feb73b6995
NO Headscarf
12020-09-23T02:14:59-07:00niki zarehdaf6e44d2e2f9adcdb0372d6ed1999b66a32e1f3377846plain2020-09-23T14:32:59-07:00niki zarehdaf6e44d2e2f9adcdb0372d6ed1999b66a32e1f3Women wearing NO head scarf to show their protest even though it was made to be a LAW a day earlier on March 7, 1979.
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1media/dast dar dast_thumb.png2020-09-23T02:03:07-07:00niki zarehdaf6e44d2e2f9adcdb0372d6ed1999b66a32e1f3Iranian Women March Against The Hijab8On March 8 1979, 100000 women marched in protest against new laws passed one day earlier that made wearing the Hijab (veil) in public compulsory for all women. “They were demanding the freedom of choice. It wasn’t a protest against religion or beliefs, in fact many religious women joined the protest, this was strictly about women’s rights, it was all about having the option.” – Hengameh Golestanmedia/dast dar dast.pngplain2020-09-23T16:27:01-07:00Eujue Lee4c467852ba9fe34b2afff6e37ce08bae096980eb