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- Past Lectures
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9kV0jE9NglA
"Until the turn of the 20th century, prisons as we know them today were virtually non-existent in Qajar Persia. Even by the mid-1920s, there were only a few hundred prisoners held by the newly centralizing Iranian government. Today, in the Islamic Republic of Iran, there are at least a quarter of a million detainees. This talk traces the remarkable transformation of Iran from a decentralized empire with few incarcerated persons in the early 20th century into a modern state with a vast prison network with hundreds of thousands of prisoners today. How and why did this exponential transformation happen? How did Iranians come to understand their increasingly policed and punished social worlds? What does Iran’s penal history tell us about the expansion of prisons across the world? This talk traces the making of the modern carceral state in Iran by focusing on what I call the public life of the modern prison. In analyzing the multilingual and multi-genre archive of prisons in Iran, this talk will explore the historical interplay between the concrete space of the Iranian prison and the role of prisons in producing new public cultures and political languages in the 20th and now into the 21st century.” - Dr. Golnar Nikpour
Golnar Nikpour is an Assistant Professor of History at Dartmouth College who specializes in modern Iranian history. Her research has been supported by the Social Science Research Council, the A.W. Mellon Foundation, and the Whiting Foundation, and her writing has appeared in Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East; Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development; The International Journal of Middle East Studies; The Canadian Journal of History; The New York Times, and Jadaliyya. Her first book, entitled The Incarcerated Modern: Prisons and Public Life in Iran is out now on Stanford University Press.