Azar Nafisi

Azar Nafisi

Professor, Johns Hopkins University

Azar Nafisi is best known as the author of the national bestseller Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books, which electrified its readers with a compassionate and often harrowing portrait of the Islamic revolution in Iran and how it affected one university professor and her students.  The book has spent over 117 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list.  Azar Nafisi’s new book, Things I Have Been Silent About: Memories, a memoir about her mother, was published in January 2009. 

Azar Nafisi is a Visiting Professor and the executive director of Cultural Conversations at the Foreign Policy Institute of Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies in Washington, DC, where she is a professor of aesthetics, culture, and literature, and teaches courses on the relation between culture and politics.  Azar Nafisi held a fellowship at Oxford University, teaching and conducting a series of lectures on culture and the important role of Western literature and culture in Iran after the revolution in 1979. She has taught at the University of Tehran, the Free Islamic University and Allameh Tabatabaii. 

2 min
No one should be forced to do something they don’t want to do, Nafisi says.
5 min
It is not women who make a big deal out of the hijab, Nafisi says. It is the Islamists.
5 min
Nafisi responds to her critics who allege that Iran has become freer since Nafisi left.
3 min
Nafisi found many of her old students when the book came out.
3 min
There is state power, and then there is the power of the writer to resist the tyranny of reality.