Professor Afsaneh Najmabadi on transsexuality in contemporary Iran

February 13, 2014

NajmabadiCMES professor Afsaneh Najmabadi’s latest book, Professing Selves: Transsexuality and Same-Sex Desire in Contemporary Iran (Duke University Press, December 2013), examines state regulation and subsidization of sex reassignment surgery in Iran. She will discuss the book at CMES on February 20, 2014 at 6:00pm as part of the Outreach Program’s Spring 2014 book launch series.

From the publisher’s website:

Since the mid-1980s, the Islamic Republic of Iran has permitted and partially subsidized sex reassignment surgery. In Professing Selves, Afsaneh Najmabadi explores the meaning of transsexuality in contemporary Iran. Combining historical and ethnographic research, she describes how, in the postrevolutionary era, the domains of law, psychology and psychiatry, Islamic jurisprudence, and biomedicine became invested in distinguishing between the acceptable "true" transsexual and other categories of identification, notably the "true" homosexual, an unacceptable category of existence in Iran. Najmabadi argues that this collaboration among medical authorities, specialized clerics, and state officials—which made transsexuality a legally tolerated, if not exactly celebrated, category of being—grew out of Iran's particular experience of Islamicized modernity. Paradoxically, state regulation has produced new spaces for non-normative living in Iran, since determining who is genuinely "trans" depends largely on the stories that people choose to tell, on the selves that they profess.

Afsaneh NajmabadiAfsaneh Najmabadi is Francis Lee Higginson Professor of History and Studies of Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Harvard University. Her other works include Women with Mustaches and Men without Beards: Gender and Sexual Anxieties of Iranian Modernity (Duke University Press, 2008), The Story of the Daughters of Quchan: Gender and National Memory in Iranian History (Syracuse University Press, 1998) and Islamicate Sexualities: Translations across Temporal Geographies of Desire (coedited with Kathryn Babayan and published by CMES’s Middle East Monograph series).  Professor Najmabadi is the director of the Women’s Worlds in Qajar Iran project, an NEH-funded digital archive of artifacts from women living during the time of the Qajar dynasty in Iran (1796–1925).