Creating the Modern Iranian Woman Quotes
Creating the Modern Iranian Woman: Popular Culture between Two Revolutions
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Liora Hendelman-Baavur3 ratings, 4.33 average rating, 1 review
Creating the Modern Iranian Woman Quotes
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“My earliest perceptions about Iran under the Pahlavis, as a young student of Middle Eastern history and social sciences in the 1990s, were absorbed in these contradictory (and often confusing) evaluations on the backdrop of overwhelming paradigm shifts and critical theories, especially those provided by subaltern studies, and the legitimation of the academic study of popular culture genres by feminist scholarship. Calls for a necessary de-westernization of Orientalist frameworks coupled with the introduction of multi(s) and posts- in contemporary literature gave way to rethinking about identity and multi-culturalism, feminisms, and post-feminism instead of feminism, gender as a replacement for sexual differences, modernity in terms of “multiple-modernities,” post-modernity or late modernity, and the conceptualization of the world’s nations as “imagined communities.”
― Creating the Modern Iranian Woman: Popular Culture between Two Revolutions
― Creating the Modern Iranian Woman: Popular Culture between Two Revolutions
“The worldwide phenomenon that came to be known as "Beatlemania" was not merely a matter of taste in music or preference for a genre in film. It came to represent a global media discourse drawing on the rising importance, visibility, self-awareness and cultural power of youth, especially the emergence of girls' subcultures, while the conventions and values of the older generation came under pressure”
― Creating the Modern Iranian Woman: Popular Culture between Two Revolutions
― Creating the Modern Iranian Woman: Popular Culture between Two Revolutions
