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From leprosy to The Willow Tree: decoding disability and Islamic spirituality in Iranian film
Authors:Emily Jane O’Dell
Affiliation:Department of English, Sultan Qaboos University, Al Koudh, Muscat, Oman
Abstract:
The lack of attention in academic discourse to representations of disability in films from the Middle East has led to an incomplete picture of representations of disability in global cinema. For instance, the diverse meanings of disability in Iranian cinema and the influence of disability on the emergence of Iranian New Wave cinema have been almost completely ignored by scholars. A number of award-winning films from Iran have featured disability as central to their narratives – such as The House is Black (1963), Taste of Cherry (1997), The Color of Paradise (1999), The Willow Tree (2005), and The Painting Pool (2013). Disability in these films serves alternatively as a symbol of spiritual possibility, a mark of marginalization, and a covert social critique. These films examine the emotional, physical, and social implications of disability, while celebrating the cultural power of film to challenge social, religious, and artistic barriers.
Keywords:Iran  film  gender  disability  leprosy  blindness  visual impairment  new wave cinema  religion  spirituality  intellectual disability  Islam  Sufism  depression  suicide
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