Rhythms of Iran, Echoes of Ireland: Silenced Voices of Sedigheh Dowlatabadi and Patricia Burke Brogan

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2025.e103855

Keywords:

Drama, Sedigheh Dowlatabadi, Patricia Burke Brogan, The Sense of Motherhood, Eclipsed

Abstract

Beginning with the suffrage movement and gaining momentum after the second wave of feminism in the 1960s and 1970s, feminist scholarship inquired how history could echo justice if only one gender narrated it. This question has highlighted the necessity of revisiting prominent though forgotten female voices in history. Accordingly, the authors of this article examine and compare the plays of two writers to explain how women’s voices are represented as oppressed and silenced subjects who endeavor to break the mental and physical siege surrounding them. Iranian playwright Sedigheh Dowlatabadi (1882-1961) and Irish dramatist Patricia Burke Brogan (1926-2022) attempted to revisit the man-written narratives in their oeuvre in order to challenge the subjugated images of women in their plays The Dark Life and Eclipsed respectively. Unlike in Europe, the suffrage movement never gained momentum in Iran, though women received the right to vote in 1963. Only recently women's social activism found expression through the Woman, Life, and Freedom uprisings. In this article, within the comparative study framework, the authors not only explore the historiographical aspects of Burke Brogan and Dowlatabadi’s feminist dramatic aspects but also revisit their significance within the larger context of women’s activism.

Author Biographies

Tuba Mozafari, Tarbiat Modares University

Tuba (Tara) Mozafari, born in Iran in 1998, holds a Bachelor’s degree in social sciences with a major in Anthropology from University of Tehran and a Master’s degree in Drama from Tarbiat Modares University. Her research focuses on the representation of subaltern women and the amplification of women’s voices in dramatic literature.

Esmaeil Najar, Tarbiat Modares University

Esmaeil Najar holds a PhD in Theatre History, Literature and Criticism from The Ohio State University, USA, and is an Assistant Professor of Drama at Tarbiat Modares University of Tehran, Iran. His research has been published in major journals of Theatre, Drama, and Literature including New Theatre Quarterly (Cambridge UP), Contemporary Theatre Review (Routledge) and International Journal of Persian Literature (Penn State UP). He is a co-editor of Asian Theatre Then and Now: A Guide for the Future, forthcoming by Routledge (UK) in 2027.

John Cunningham , Ollscoil na Gaillimhe – University of Galway

John Cunningham is an emeritus Associate Professor in History at the University of Galway, Ireland. He is an editor of Saothar: Journal of Irish Labour History. His publications include Hardiman & Beyond: Culture and Society in Galway since 1820 (co-editor, 2023) and Spirit of Revolution: Ireland from Below, 1917-1923 (co-editor, 2024).

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Published

2025-06-16

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Literary and Cultural Studies Dossier

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