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Reading Lolita in Tehran
Nafisi and Keshavarz
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Betty
(last edited Apr 16, 2013 05:19AM)
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Feb 16, 2013 06:48PM

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"to read, discuss, and respond to works of fiction."One of the themes is their being shaped by someone else's dream instead of as each imagines her/himself--
"the confiscation of one individual's life by another."Another theme is being
"...caught between tradition and change. I've been in the middle of it all my life."The Nabokov chapter ends with the recommendation to
"...find a way to preserve one's individuality, that unique quality which evades description but differentiates one human being from the other."

"I told my students I wanted them in their readings to consider in what ways these works unsettled them, made them a little uneasy, made them look around and consider the world, like Alice in Wonderland, through different eyes."Interspersed with discussion of that controversial novel is Nafisi's eyewitness account of university protests and her involvement in them.




"At the core of the fight for political rights is the desire to protect ourselves, to prevent the political from intruding on our individual lives."Nafisi mentions that her students came from a variety of backgrounds and beliefs.
"...the first lesson in fighting tyranny is to do your own thing and satisfy your own conscience."
"...refusing to give up their right to pursue happiness..."

"It is obvious that she is more interested in happiness than in the institution of marriage, in love and understanding than matrimony. This is apparent from all of the mismatched marriages in her novels...Like Scheherazade in her tales, one finds an infinite variety of good and bad marriages, good and bad men and women."This final section of the memoir--she left Iran in 1997--portrays her feelings about making that decision and her students' whereabouts several years later.

I am at the beginning of Keshavarz's response to RLT now. She opens with "This has indeed been a delightful journey in writing." Then, her purposes are stated: first, to understand literary narrative like Nafisi's RLT which she calls New Orientalist narrative in its point of view, and, second, to inform persons unfamiliar with Iranian culture about it by bringing to the fore examples of Iranian female authors, of classic Sufi stories, and of personal eyewitness through visits.

People memorized medieval Persian poetry of Hāfez, Rumi, and Sa'di, quoting applicable lines in their daily, modern lives.

فروغ فرخزاد, Forough Farrokhzad, a widely known poet ("the main move is to cross the inner borders and access the core of life itself"), who died early. She possessed great self-assurance and personal independence, both contrasting with the media-driven image of submissive, "sensationalized" Muslim women as well as defining the archetype for the real Iranian woman. Nonetheless, Keshavarz recognizes from personal experience the expectations--"virginity", "distinct gender roles", "stigma of divorce"--of a traditional culture towards single, divorced females.


Discusses Shahrnush Parsipur's somewhat magic realist fiction Women Without Men: A Novel of Modern Iran, a contemporary Persian novel. She asks, "...how can women break out of it and get on the road?", a question to be literally taken and a theme in this story of several women who courageously set out alone and inadvertently meet in a Tehran garden:
"Discovering the world is not for sissies. It means losing the protection of home, or abandoning it because it has never really provided much protection. It means taking responsibility for yourself."Very interesting imo is the flowering woman Tree watered with human milk.
"If learning means travel, and travel implies danger, so be it."
"The women are safe and their basic needs met. They can now think about life beyond the walls of the garden."

After a summary of Jasmine and Stars thus far, Keshavarz goes on to point contemporary Iran's multidisciplinary, cultural stars out and show how RLT consistently approves westernized views, people, and actions not so unlike the Iranian ones N criticizes or doesn't notice.

Books mentioned in this topic
Women Without Men (other topics)Jasmine and Stars: Reading More Than Lolita in Tehran (other topics)
Pride and Prejudice (other topics)
Lolita (other topics)
The Arabian Nights (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Shahrnush Parsipur (other topics)Forugh Farrokhzad (other topics)
Jane Austen (other topics)
Fatemeh Keshavarz (other topics)
Fatemeh Keshavarz (other topics)
More...