Creating the Modern Iranian Woman
Popular Culture between Two Revolutions

The Global Middle East Series

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A fresh look at Iranian popular culture and women's role within this prior to the 1979 Revolution.

Language: English
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Creating the Modern Iranian Woman
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340 p. · 15.7x23.4 cm · Hardback
Between the 1963 'White Revolution' and the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the position of women in Iran experienced a number of fundamental shifts. Policies and reforms were introduced, including land, suffrage, education and dress reforms which the Pahlavi regime claimed would advance the position of women and would lead to a swift modernisation of the country. In this book, Liora Hendelman-Baavur examines these changes, looking at the interactions between global aspects of modernity and notions of identity in Iranian popular culture. By focusing on the history of Iran's popular print media, with emphasis on women's commercial magazines, Hendelman-Baavur challenges familiar western assumptions about the complexities of Iranian popular culture. Her analysis situates Iranian women's magazines within their broader economic, social, political and cultural context, demonstrating how representations of the modern woman in Iranian popular culture were influenced by the intricate nature of cultural contact and exchange between Iran and the West.
Introduction; Part I. Magazines in the Making: 1. The legacy of the past; 2. Circulation, commercialization and state intervention; 3. Reproduction, patronage and readership; Part II. Agents of Correlation and Change: 4. Family guidance, domestic technology and the modern housewife; 5. Youth culture and the new bi-hejab girl; 6. Exogamy, brain drain and the western woman; 7. Queen, working mother and the making of the Royal family.
Liora Hendelman-Baavur is a Lecturer in the Department of Middle Eastern and African History at Tel Aviv University. She is the co-author (with David Menashri) of Iran: Anatomy of a Revolution (2009, in Hebrew).