Reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran

This thesis examines gender in the popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran. It argues that a distinctly feminine discourse gradually emerged in post-revolutionary Iranian cinema and became very visible in the reformist period (1997-2005). This research covers the period between the establishment o...

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Main Author: Dadar, Taraneh
Published: Queen Margaret University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.561219
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5612192019-01-04T03:20:23ZReading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary IranDadar, Taraneh2012This thesis examines gender in the popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran. It argues that a distinctly feminine discourse gradually emerged in post-revolutionary Iranian cinema and became very visible in the reformist period (1997-2005). This research covers the period between the establishment of the Islamic Republic and the end of the reformist period (1979-2005). Drawing on Stuart Hall (1981), this thesis considers popular culture, and popular cinema by extension, as a site of cultural struggle and focuses on gender representation as a major locus of post-revolutionary socio-political negotiation. Reading Iranian cinema in terms of an art/popular spectrum, the thesis examines four case studies from films that have been commercially successful, and have mobilised generic or formal conventions through their controversial gender representations. Three of these case studies, The Bride (1992), Red (1999) and Hemlock (2000) examine femininity in post-revolutionary popular cinema, while The Snowman (1995) has been included for its transgressive representation of masculinity.791.43Media and CommunicationQueen Margaret Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.561219https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/7330Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 791.43
Media and Communication
spellingShingle 791.43
Media and Communication
Dadar, Taraneh
Reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran
description This thesis examines gender in the popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran. It argues that a distinctly feminine discourse gradually emerged in post-revolutionary Iranian cinema and became very visible in the reformist period (1997-2005). This research covers the period between the establishment of the Islamic Republic and the end of the reformist period (1979-2005). Drawing on Stuart Hall (1981), this thesis considers popular culture, and popular cinema by extension, as a site of cultural struggle and focuses on gender representation as a major locus of post-revolutionary socio-political negotiation. Reading Iranian cinema in terms of an art/popular spectrum, the thesis examines four case studies from films that have been commercially successful, and have mobilised generic or formal conventions through their controversial gender representations. Three of these case studies, The Bride (1992), Red (1999) and Hemlock (2000) examine femininity in post-revolutionary popular cinema, while The Snowman (1995) has been included for its transgressive representation of masculinity.
author Dadar, Taraneh
author_facet Dadar, Taraneh
author_sort Dadar, Taraneh
title Reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran
title_short Reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran
title_full Reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran
title_fullStr Reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran
title_full_unstemmed Reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary Iran
title_sort reading against the veil : gender and politics in popular cinema of post-revolutionary iran
publisher Queen Margaret University
publishDate 2012
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.561219
work_keys_str_mv AT dadartaraneh readingagainsttheveilgenderandpoliticsinpopularcinemaofpostrevolutionaryiran
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