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ID124451
Title ProperClassy kids and down-at-heel intellectuals
Other Title Informationstatus aspiration and blind spots in the contemporary ethnography of Iran
LanguageENG
AuthorOlszewska, Zuzanna
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article reviews the ways in which class, status, social mobility and their cultural ramifications have been considered (or failed to be considered) in recent ethnographic studies of the Islamic Republic of Iran. It argues against the trend of privileging "resistance" to an oppressive state as a theoretical frame for documenting social phenomena in Iran: lifestyles and consumption patterns cannot be interpreted merely as signs of political rebellion because they are endowed with symbolic value as status attributes in a society whose class configurations are shifting. I present a number of sources and concepts that help to rethink these phenomena, and show how the experience of Afghan refugees living on the margins of Iranian cities illuminates both the opportunities and constraints created by the Islamic Republic's uneasy mix of political Islam, populism and neoliberalism. A focus on aspiration to upward mobility becomes a useful analytical lens that allows us to sidestep reductive dichotomies such as tradition/modernity or religion/secularism that are in practice blurred by its very pursuit.
`In' analytical NoteIranian Studies Vol.46, No.6; 2013: p.841-862
Journal SourceIranian Studies Vol.46, No.6; 2013: p.841-862
Key WordsGeography ;  Anthropology ;  Recreation ;  Social Sciences ;  Social History and Conditions ;  Social Problems ;  Social Reform ;  Communities ;  Classes Races ;  Cultural Ramifications ;  Ethnographic ;  Republic of Iran ;  Afghan Refugee