opression
Articles tagged with opression
Tag Archive
- 1:54
- 27 de Maio de 1977
- afropolitismo
- anti-semitism
- Artafrica
- artists
- As Cidades Invisíveis
- atafona
- Bab Septa
- Capeverdean
- CES
- Chris Marker
- Circulation; Symbolic Ethnicity; Emotional Communities; Invention of Tradition; Memory of Place; Transculturalism
- civil war
- collector
- Colômbia
- conversas
- culture
- curatoria
- decolonial
- Deleuze
- democracy
- diáspora caboverdiana
- eurocentrism
- european
- factory of disposable feelings
- Felix Shumba
- fleeing
- França
- Freud
- future
- geopolitics
- Gérard Quenum
- Gilberto Freyre
- hangar
- history of Africa
- humanist paradigm
- independência
- insularity
- interculturalidade
- Irland
- Joana gomes
- joao viana
- journalism
- kilimanjaro
- kurdish
- labor
- Lagos
- Licínio Azevedo
- Luís Lopes de Sequeira; Angola; história colonial; nativismo; nacionalismo.
- luso-afro cinema
- luso-tropicologia
- lusotropicalismo
- Margarida Cardoso
- Maria Eugénia da Cruz
- Memories of the Poisoned River
- migratory politics
- Miguel Gomes
- movies
- muriqui
- mythology
- New Orleans
- Nito Alves
- O que temos a ver com isto? O papel político das organizações culturais
- Octavia Butler
- pandemic
- paris conference
- past
- Pedro José-Marcellino
- pensamento
- plateau
- poem
- police brutaliy
- post-colonialism
- practices of resistance
- Práticas artísticas
- primatas
- Racismo
- refugiados
- revolution
- Robyn Orlin
- Senhor dos Milagres Escravo de Angola
- Sociedades Africanas
- SOFIA YALA
- space
- storytelling
- sudoeste
- surname
- Teatro Griot
- tecnologia
- Terceira Metade
- territory
- The Party of the Dead
- transmission
- Uma Biografia”
- United States
- University of Coimbra
- Yonamine
- youth
- “Sexual Misconduct in Academia”
 Shortly after Amini’s violent death on 16 September, protests broke out and spread from the Kurdish parts of Iran to the whole country and the world. Demonstrators chanted  the Kurdish slogan “jin, jiyan, azadî” – “woman, life, freedom”. But in news reports, particularly Western ones, Jîna Amini’s Kurdish identity has been erased – she is described as an Iranian woman and her ‘official’ Persian name ‘Mahsa’ – which for her family and friends existed only on state-documents –is the one in headlines. Calls to “say her name” echo in real life and across social media but unwittingly obscure Jîna’s real name and, in doing so, her Kurdish identity.
				Shortly after Amini’s violent death on 16 September, protests broke out and spread from the Kurdish parts of Iran to the whole country and the world. Demonstrators chanted  the Kurdish slogan “jin, jiyan, azadî” – “woman, life, freedom”. But in news reports, particularly Western ones, Jîna Amini’s Kurdish identity has been erased – she is described as an Iranian woman and her ‘official’ Persian name ‘Mahsa’ – which for her family and friends existed only on state-documents –is the one in headlines. Calls to “say her name” echo in real life and across social media but unwittingly obscure Jîna’s real name and, in doing so, her Kurdish identity.		



