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Beeta Baghoolizadeh examines the twin processes of enslavement and erasure of Black people in Iran during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, showing how following the abolition of slavery in 1929, Iranian society collectively forgot and ignored its history of racism and slavery.
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Keywords
- abolition
- archival studies
- Black Iranians
- Blackness
- Domestic enslavement
- Enslavement
- erasure
- Eunuchs'
- Family
- History-making
- Human trafficking
- Iran
- Iran-Iraq War
- Manumission Law of 1929
- Memory
- Middle East
- Minstrelsy
- Mozaffar ed-Din Shah
- Naser ed-Din Shah
- Nationalism
- Pahlavi Era
- Persian Gulf
- Photography
- Qajar court
- Race
- Racial geographies
- Reza Shah
- Siyah
- Slavery
- Social media
- Trouillot
- Visibility
- visual studies
Links
DOI: 10.1215/9781478059257Editions
