Well, with 60% of university students being women, I'm struggling to reconcile this with the view that the cultural norm is not to have educated women or liberated women.
From my experience, Iranians are quite cultured and have a variety of views on religion, the role of women etc. I think it would be wrong to think that there aren't as may 'liberated' or liberal minded Iranian men as there are Iranian women. Why should Iranian marriages be oppressive (or more oppressive than marriages in other societies?)
I wouldn't view marriage as part of the oppression of women, or the desire that single people should marry is a sign of oppression. It would be interesting to note how many of the women in work and education are married. The increasing rate of divorce is an indication of tensions - but divorce rates is a global issue.
Women in Iran have worked and played full part in society for a long time. Since the revolution there was a crack down, but the article is about what is happening now.
I make a distinction between Persian cultural norms - where marriage is viewed as a societal norm, and oppressive misogynistic views about women not working etc. But Mel is in a better place to comment.
Just agreeing to disagree with you K.
Cheers,
Shafique