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Iranian Revolution 30 Years On

Conference: Thirty Years On: The Social and Cultural Impacts of the Iranian Revolution

Iranian Revolution 30 Anniversary Poster

Thirty Years On: The Social and Cultural Impacts of the Iranian Revolution

The list of speakers is confirmed on the programme

Date: 5 June 2009Time: 9:00 AM

Finishes: 6 June 2009Time: 5:30 PM

Venue: Brunei GalleryRoom: Brunei Gallery Lecture Theatre

Type of Event: Conference

A conference organised by the Centre for Media and Film Studies at SOAS with the support of the Iran Heritage Foundation, BBC World Service Trust, The London Middle East Institute, Documentary Experimental Film Center, Cultural Centre of Islamic Republic of Iran – London, Al Tajir Foundation, Iranian Documentary Filmmakers Association and others  

Conference Programme
Film Programme
A little Bit Iranian: An Anglo-Iranian Comedy Special
The Iranian Underground: A Night of New Alternative Live Music From Iran

Post Conference Activities

The revolution of 1979 that brought the Islamic Republic into being has produced profound yet contradictory changes in the social and cultural spheres of Iranian life. While religious ideology and revolutionary fervour remain the credo of the state, the younger generation that makes up seventy percent of the population appear neither very revolutionary nor very ideological in any classic sense, while at the same time they seem to be inventing a new politics for the 21st century. The encounters between religious tradition and secular modernity, between new technologies and old ways of seeing, have a long history in Iran but have become more pronounced over the past thirty years as a religious state attempts to reconfigure public life at the very moment that globalizing trends in ideas and images are felt inside Iran.

As formal politics remains highly constrained, new forms are being invented. This produces the ironic consequence that despite a state that discourages many forms of modern entertainment and what it deems as non-Islamic culture, the Internet, music, arts, photography and film have become potent means of communication in Iran. While issues of nuclear weapons and international insecurity dominate the mainstream media inside and outside Iran, issues around women’s rights, personal freedoms and new cultural practices have taken centre stage amongst Iranians themselves. Young men and women activists, lawyers, journalists and workers use the Internet as an effective space for gathering, organizing and communicating their latest messages. Young rap singers invite their contemporaries to “stand up” and “persevere”. While women are required to maintain Islamic modesty, they are using film and photography to illustrate their widening horizons and open vision. Rates of transgender surgery and heroin addiction are high. Unemployment and poverty are growing and inflation seems out of control. The family is under pressure when the state does not provide. The international cultural market welcomes contemporary forms of Iranian expression even as they are find limited distribution inside Iran.

This conference proposes to focus on these contradictory developments in the social and cultural lives of Iranians since the revolution. It aims to bring some of the best-known practitioners in the media and contemporary arts inside Iran together with academicians and theoreticians of these developments in a unique encounter. The first day will focus mainly on social issues and changing values around women and young people, while the second day will examine novel forms of cultural expressivity including rap music and blogging.

Conference events will include live music and comedy (further details to be confirmed in due course).

The conference will focus on, but is not limited to, the following topics:

  • New roles for women
  • Changing family structure and the lives of young people
  • Music and creativity
  • Varied voices within official media:Radio Javan, Gofto Goo, Payam
  • Images beyond Orientalism: the explosion of art and photography
  • Youth culture, fashion and design
  • Comedy, cartoons and satire
  • Tehran as a global city
  • Urban change beyond the capital
  • Social networking and the internet: from Facebook to Orkut
  • New writing cultures from blogging to SMS
  • Establishing the cultural industries inside Iran
  • Connecting the inside and the outside - diasporas and everyday life

A book, edited by Annabelle Sreberny and Massoumeh Torfeh, of selected papers from the conference will be prepared for IBTauris, in the series “Iran and the Persianate World”.

Further Information

The additional 30 Years On website will function as a semi-formal conference hub where information about the conference will be provided (articles, resources, pictures, audio) for both the participants as well as the general public.

Language

The language of the conference in English.  All papers will be delivered in English and English will be the language of debate.  All films screened during the conference will have English subtitles.

Further details about the evening performances

As part of the two-day conference ‘Thirty Years On’ SOAS are proud to be hosting:

SOAS LogoLMEI LogoIran Heritage LogoBBC World Service Trust LogoDocumentary Experimental Film Centre LogoAl Tajir LogoCultural Centre The Embassy of I.R Iran London Logo

Organiser: SOAS

Sponsor: Iran Heritage Foundation, BBC World Service Trust, The London Middle East Institute, Documentary Experimental Film Center, Cultural Centre of Islamic Republic of Iran – London, Al Tajir Foundation, Iranian Documentary Filmmakers Association and others

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