Fieldwork: Overview

Fieldwork: Overview

My doctoral research is based on long-term ethnographic engagement with death, mourning, cemeteries, martyrdom, political violence, and material culture in Iran. In 2024, I conducted a multi-sited fieldwork project across several regions of the country, moving between borderlands, urban centres, cemeteries, museums, ritual sites, villages, war landscapes, and spaces shaped by political mourning.

This fieldwork included research in Arab Khuzestan, Kermanshah, Kurdistan, West Azerbaijan, Baluchistan, Tehran, Shiraz, Isfahan, and Shahin Shahr. Across these sites, I examined how death is mourned, governed, ritualized, remembered, and politicized through bodies, graves, laments, music, images, objects, ceremonies, and public space.

A major part of this research focused on local and vernacular mourning practices, especially women’s lamentation, Lur and Kurdish mourning traditions, Hurreh/Horeh singing in Kermanshah, Balochi lamentation and music, and forms of grief that circulate outside official institutions. I was especially interested in how women participate in mourning as ritual actors, narrators, singers, memory-keepers, and political subjects.

At the same time, I conducted fieldwork in more official and institutional sites of death, including Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in Tehran, museums related to death and martyrdom, national and religious ceremonies, 22 Bahman commemorations, and funerary events for unknown martyrs. This allowed me to compare local, familial, and vernacular forms of mourning with state-organized, ideological, and institutional forms of death management.

Together, these field sites form the empirical foundation of my doctoral project on the social and political agency of dead bodies in contemporary Iran. They allow me to trace how the dead continue to act through ritual, material culture, gendered mourning, burial spaces, public memory, and political contestation.

Book Chapter: Governing the Dead’s Territory

Book Chapter: Governing the Dead’s Territory

The Politicization of Death in Iran
Hajar Ghorbani
Published in Death and Institutions: Processes, Places and Past
Bristol University Press / Policy Press, 2025

Governing the Dead’s Territory: The Politicization of Death in Iran examines Tehran’s Behesht-e Zahra cemetery as a major institutional space where death, burial, urban management, religious nationalism, and state power intersect in post-revolutionary Iran. The chapter asks how a cemetery can become more than a site of burial and mourning: how it can function as a governed territory through which the dead are classified, commemorated, organized, and incorporated into broader political narratives.

The chapter focuses on the transformation of Behesht-e Zahra into a large-scale municipal, ritual, and political institution. It considers how cemetery space, bureaucratic management, burial practices, martyrs’ sections, official ceremonies, and public memory contribute to the politicization of death in contemporary Iran.

This chapter is part of my broader research on death, mourning, material culture, political violence, and the social agency of dead bodies. It reflects my interest in how dead bodies and burial spaces continue to shape public life after death, generating forms of memory, obligation, legitimacy, and political meaning.

Publication Details

Chapter: “Governing the Dead’s Territory: The Politicization of Death in Iran”
Author: Hajar Ghorbani
Book: Death and Institutions: Processes, Places and Past
Editors: Kate Woodthorpe, Helen Frisby, and Bethan Michael-Fox
Publisher: Bristol University Press / Policy Press
Publication date: February 28, 2025

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Social Studies of Death in Iran

Social Studies of Death in Iran

Edited by Hajar Ghorbani
Anthropology Publication, 2021
Original Persian title: Motāleʿāt-e Ejtemāʿi-ye Marg: Jostārhāyi Darbāb-e Marg dar Farhang va Jāmeʿeh-ye Irāni
Persian title: مطالعات اجتماعی مرگ: جستارهایی درباب مرگ در فرهنگ و جامعه ایرانی

Social Studies of Death in Iran is an edited volume in Persian, published by Anthropology Publication in 2021. The book brings together a group of scholars and writers to examine death, dying, mourning, burial, sacred death, medicalization, memory, art, literature, and cemetery spaces in Iranian society.

The volume was developed at a time when death studies had not yet been established as a recognized interdisciplinary field in Iran. Although death has long occupied a central place in Iranian religious, political, literary, and cultural life, it had rarely been approached as a sustained field of social inquiry. This book was therefore conceived as an attempt to open a space for interdisciplinary conversation around death and dying in Iran.

The book approaches death not as a merely biological event, but as a social, cultural, political, and material phenomenon. It asks how death is managed, symbolized, ritualized, medicalized, represented, and governed in Iranian society. It also considers how different historical periods, religious traditions, political transformations, urban institutions, medical systems, artistic forms, and literary representations have shaped the ways Iranians encounter death and mourning.

The volume is organized around several major themes: the social history of death, changing meanings of death, the medicalization of death, sacred death and martyrdom, representations of death in art and literature, and the emergence of large-scale cemetery spaces in Iran. Through these themes, the book introduces death as an interdisciplinary object of study and brings together perspectives from anthropology, sociology, history, philosophy, medicine, psychology, literature, art, and cultural studies.

A central concern of the volume is the place of death in modern and post-revolutionary Iran. The book examines how processes such as urbanization, state formation, medicalization, war, martyrdom, cemetery management, and the institutional organization of burial have transformed the social experience of death. In this sense, the volume does not treat death as a private or marginal matter. It shows how death is embedded in public life, political authority, religious meaning, family relations, urban space, and collective memory.

The section on sacred death and martyrdom is especially important for understanding the relationship between death and political life in Iran. The book situates martyrdom, war death, memorialization, and cemetery organization within the broader history of the post-revolutionary state. It pays attention to how the Iran-Iraq War, martyrs’ graves, funeral ceremonies, memorial policies, and cemetery landscapes have contributed to the political and cultural organization of death in contemporary Iran.

The volume also engages with the visual and material dimensions of death. Tombstones, cemeteries, memorial forms, artistic representations, literary images, and funerary spaces are treated as important sites through which death becomes visible and meaningful. This attention to material and visual culture connects the book to broader questions that continue to shape my own research: how the dead remain socially present, how material forms organize memory, and how bodies, graves, images, and objects participate in the making of social and political worlds.

For me, editing this volume was an important early step in developing death studies in relation to Iranian society. It brought together scholars from different disciplines and created a platform for thinking about death beyond a single theoretical or disciplinary framework. The project also shaped the trajectory of my later doctoral research on the agency of dead bodies, political mourning, martyrdom, cemeteries, and the politics of death in contemporary Iran.

Decolonising Death Studies

Decolonising Death Studies

Edited by Panagiotis Pentaris, Stacey Pitsillides, and Hajar Ghorbani
Routledge, 2026

Decolonising Death Studies brings together international and interdisciplinary perspectives that rethink death studies beyond primarily Western frameworks. The volume foregrounds decolonial, situated, and globally diverse approaches to death, dying, mourning, ritual, care, and end-of-life knowledge.

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