A young Iranian-American
journalist returns to Tehran, where she realizes not just the repressive and
extravagant life of her Iranian peers who have grown up after the revolution,
but also the agony of yearning for a nation that may not exist.
Azadeh Moaveni has
struggled with her complicated identity as an Iranian-American as she can
remember. Azadeh lives in two worlds in suburban America. She was the daughter
of the Iranian refugee community at home, pouring tea, adhering to tradition,
and daydreaming about Tehran. Outside, she was a California girl who listened
to Madonna and did yoga. She had disregarded the heated standoff among the cultural
groups for years.
But college heightened
the tensions between Iran and the United States, and after graduation, she
traveled to Iran to work as a journalist. This is the narrative of her
struggle for identification in the midst of two cultures torn apart by a tragic
past. It's also the narrative of Iran, a restless country in the throes of a
revolution.
Moaveni's return overlaps
with the period of the country's reform movement when young people took to the
streets and chanted for the end of the Islamic dictatorship. In these turbulent
times, she fights to make a living in a dark country that is diametrically
opposed to the dazzling, saffron, and turquoise-tinted Iran of her fantasy.
Moaveni creates a unique portrayal of Iran's rebellious future generation as
she brings us into the drug-soaked, underground parties of Tehran and into the
hedonistic lives of young people longing for change. Her Tehran landscape—ski
slopes, fashion shows, shops, and cafes—is filled with
Great work done .keep it up 💯
ReplyDeleteKeep it up great work
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