Foreword by Arshin Adib-Moghaddam; Preface by Jennifer A. Jordan; Introduction; 1. Segmented society and the social production of communal spaces; 2. Segmented society and spaces of political mobilization; 3. Iranian travelers and the production of spatial knowledge; 4. The Qajar court and the city: spatial strategies of the state in the nineteenth century; 5. The interwar period and middle-class urbanism; 6. The age of social movements: the transformation of political public space; Conclusion; Appendix: protest, political gatherings, and parades between 1941 and 1953; Bibliography; Index.
Outlines how Tehran's social spaces were transformed by shifting discourses and practices from the nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century.
Ashkan Rezvani Naraghi (1983–2020) was Assistant Professor in the School of Urban Planning and Design at the University of Tehran. He received his Ph.D. in Urban Studies from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2016 and his article on middle-class urbanism appeared in Iranian Studies in 2017.
'In this meticulous and careful study, Tehran is no longer just a
setting or even a contested site, but an almost living creature
that shares in and shapes its inhabitants' lives and social
transformations over time. This book is a gift from an insightful
colleague who, though lost to us now, invites us to revisit our own
work with fresh eyes and prods us towards new and productive lines
of inquiry.' Camron Michael Amin, University of
Michigan-Dearborn
'This book is a seminal analysis of the role of Tehran in Iran's
social history. Based on a valuable array of primary material, it
provides a unique window into the human and physical geographies of
the capital during the turbulent social transformations of the
first part of the twentieth century. A refreshing addition to our
understanding of modern Iran.' Siavush Randjbar-Daemi, University
of St Andrews
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