Folk-lore

Folk-lore
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 204
Release: 1992
Genre: Folklore
ISBN:

We Heard the Heavens Then

We Heard the Heavens Then
Author: Aria Minu-Sepehr
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2013-04-23
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1451652194

Biography & autobiography.

My Shadow Is My Skin

My Shadow Is My Skin
Author: Katherine Whitney
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2020-03-16
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 147732027X

The Iranian revolution of 1979 launched a vast, global diaspora, with many Iranians establishing new lives in the United States. In the four decades since, the diaspora has expanded to include not only those who emigrated immediately after the revolution but also their American-born children, more recent immigrants, and people who married into Iranian families, all of whom carry their own stories of trauma, triumph, adversity, and belonging that reflect varied and nuanced perspectives on what it means to be Iranian or Iranian American. The essays in My Shadow Is My Skin are these stories. This collection brings together thirty-two authors, both established and emerging, whose writing captures the diversity of diasporic experiences. Reflecting on the Iranian American experience over the past forty years and shedding new light on themes of identity, duality, and alienation in twenty-first-century America, the authors present personal narratives of immigration, sexuality, marginalization, marriage, and religion that offer an antidote to the news media’s often superficial portrayals of Iran and the people who have a connection to it. My Shadow Is My Skin pulls back the curtain on a community that rarely gets to tell its own story.

The Making of Exile Cultures

The Making of Exile Cultures
Author: Hamid Naficy
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 302
Release: 1993-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780816620845

Using Iranian television as a case study, The Making of Exile Cultures explores the seemingly contradictory way in which immigrant media and cultural productions serve as the source both of resistance and opposition to domination by host and home country's social values while simultaneously acting as vehicles for personal and cultural transformation and the assimilation of those values.

My Name Is Iran

My Name Is Iran
Author: Davar Ardalan
Publisher: Macmillan + ORM
Total Pages: 357
Release: 2010-07-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1429923733

A century of family tales from two beloved but divided homelands, Iran and America Drawing on her remarkable personal history, NPR producer Davar Ardalan brings us the lives of three generations of women and their ordeals with love, rejection, and revolution. Her American grandmother's love affair with an Iranian physician took her from New York to Iran in 1931. Ardalan herself moved from San Francsico to rural Iran in 1964 with her Iranian American parents who barely spoke Farsi. After her parents' divorce, Ardalan joined her father in Brookline, Massachusetts, where he had gone to make a new life; however improbably, after high school, Ardalan decided to move back to an Islamic Iran. When she arrived, she discovered a world she hardly recognized, and one which demands a near-complete renunciation of the freedoms she experienced in the West. In time, she and her young family make the opposite migration and discover the difficulties, however paradoxical, inherent in living a free life in America.

A Hundred Veils

A Hundred Veils
Author: Rea Keech
Publisher: Real Nice Books
Total Pages: 311
Release: 2015-04
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0983699046

A young American professor at the University of Tehran falls in love with an Iranian artist and is thwarted by social, political, and religious forces that seem beyond his control. Set in the time of the Shah, this is a heart-warming picture of the Iranian people who befriend, guide, love, and laugh at Marco, the naive foreigner whose love for Mastaneh seems hopeless and doomed.

Thus Speaks Mother Simorq

Thus Speaks Mother Simorq
Author: Azadeh Azad
Publisher: FriesenPress
Total Pages: 272
Release: 2018-05-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1525528157

In this collection of short stories, we follow a Persian mythological bird woman, Mother Simorq, who appears in many stories as a wise woman or a nanny. We read about teenage girls experiencing their coming of age within authoritarian or male-dominated environments and one little girl facing questions of life and death. We enter the world of a woman who transgresses oppressive social norms to be free and the nightmare of another one who has to commit murder to save her children. We see how women lost their power in human society as we read about a handful of symbolic characters interacting in a magical land. Finally, we revisit Sudaba, a mythical queen, as a contemporary Iranian woman in Canada, who loves her step-son like a traditional mother and pays heavily for her son-worshiping complex.