Being Modern in Iran by Fariba Adelkhah, Jonathan Derrick (Translator), Fondation Nationale Des Sciences Politiq

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: March 2000
  • 190pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: March 2000
    • Publisher: Columbia University Press
    • Format: Hardcover, 190pp

    Synopsis

    Since its 1979 revolution seized the world's attention, the Islamic Republic of Iran has remained a subject of misunderstanding, passion, and polemic. This book — a study of Iran's political culture in the broadest and deepest sense — examines the tremendous changes taking place in Iran today.

    Most studies of contemporary Iran overemphasize the revolution's radical break with the past and focus exclusively on the Republic's Islamic character as the decisive factor in its social reality. But modernity has not simply been banished and excluded from Iran; nor have the effects of globalization passed it by. Drawing on her extensive ethnographic fieldwork in Iran and an encyclopedic knowledge of contemporary Iranian politics and culture, anthropologist Fariba Adelkhah investigates modernity in the Islamic Republic of Iran by looking at the growth of individualism, the bureaucracy, commercial forces, and rationalization in post-revolution Iran.

    Journal of Palestine Studies

    This fascinating study of postrevolutionary Iran, based on extensive anthropological field research undertaken by Adelkhah in the 1990s, ought to be required reading for anyone wanting to understand the political and social changes in Iran during the past two decades. . . . This highly readable book is especially valuable for teachers looking for a volume that goes beyond simplistic stereotypes about Iran and Islam and also stimulates discussion and comparative analyses among students.

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    Biography

    Fariba Adelkhah is a senior researcher at the Centre d'Etudes et de Recherches Internationales (CERI/Sciences-po) in Paris.

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