Homa Nategh Explained

Homa Nategh
Birth Date:26 May 1934[1]
Birth Place:Urmia, Iran
Death Place:Arrou, France
Spouse:Nasser Pakdaman
Children:2
Parents:Naseh Nategh (father)
Nosrat Rafei (mother)
Thesis Title:Seyyed Djamal-ed-Din Assad Abadi dit Afghani: Ses sejour, son action et son influence en Perse
Thesis Url:https://ganj-old.irandoc.ac.ir/articles/371748
Doctoral Advisor:Marcel Colombe
Thesis Year:1967
Discipline:History
Workplaces:
Alma Mater:Sorbonne

Homa Nategh (Persian: هما ناطق; May 26, 1934  - January 1, 2016) was an Iranian historian, Professor of History at University of Tehran.[2] [3] A specialist in the contemporary history of Iran, she resided in Paris, France, until her death.[4] She was active during Iran's 1979 revolution. After the revolution she was purged from the University of Tehran and moved to Paris, where she was appointed as professor of the Iranian Studies at the Sorbonne. In Sorbonne she published several articles on Iranian history in Qajar period.[5]

Political activities

Nategh began her political activities when she was a student in Paris,[5] having been described as "sympathetic to feminist causes and to the Ieft wing of the National Front". Ironically enough, however, during the 1979 revolution in Iran she joined voices with fundamentalist Islamists and called for all women to wear Islamic hijab. She was a member of the Confederation of Iranian Students, and one of the first females join it.[5] After the Iranian Revolution, she was associated with the Organization of Iranian People's Fedai Guerrillas and after the split, she sided with the minority faction.[5]

Notes and References

  1. https://shahrvand.com/archives/67515 در سوگ هما ناطق
  2. Web site: Nategh, Homa. .; Harvard Iranian Oral History Project; Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies; Harvard University . Ted.lib.harvard.edu . 1984-04-07 . 2016-01-03 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171227180228/http://ted.lib.harvard.edu/ted/deliver/~iohp/Nategh,+Homa.06 . 2017-12-27 . dead .
  3. Book: Shahidian, Hammed . Women in Iran: Gender politics in the Islamic republic . 35 . 2002 . . 978-0-313-31476-6 .
  4. Web site: Remembering Homa Nategh – Encyclopaedia Iranica. electricpulp.com. www.iranicaonline.org. en. 2017-12-27.
  5. Atabaki. Touraj. Nasser. Mohajer. 11 April 2016. OBITUARY - In Memoriam Homa Nategh (1934-2016). Iranian Studies. 49. 2. 325–326. 10.1080/00210862.2016.1142256. free.