: Observing Norm Creation Processes at the Artists' House
First Statement of Responsibility
\ Behnoosh Payvar.
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
New York, NY
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
: Palgrave Macmillan
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
, 2015.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
xxxix, 190 p.
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
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Bibliography
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Index
CONTENTS NOTE
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Machine generated contents note: -- Table of ContentsList of illustrationsAcknowledgementsPreface1.Artists' House 2.Interacting Wide3.ReflectionsBibliographyIndex.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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"Using the case of Tehran's Artists' House, Space, Culture, and the Youth in Iran places the socio-political implications of Iran's social and cultural transformation in a local-global context. The author examines the bipolar dimension of openness to change versus conservation in the context of everyday life in Tehran - as well as the role both sets of values play in Iranian society. The text addresses the reflexive interaction of the youth with technology and mass communications, law, society, and traditional and religious perceptions and values. Contemporary questions concerning body, self, identity, shared emotions, and lifestyle in the youth culture of Iran are also investigated as the book explores the Artists' House as an alternative space contributing to the emergence, continuance, and coexistence of new ideas, norms, and values"--
Text of Note
"This book uses the case of Artists' House, a cultural center in Tehran, to place the socio-political implications of Iran's social and cultural transformation in a local-global context. The author examines the bipolar dimension of openness to change versus conservation and the role of these values in both in Iranian society generally and in the context of everyday life in Tehran. The text addresses reflexive interaction of the youth with technology and mass communications, law, society, traditional and religious perceptions and values, and contemporary questions concerning body, self, identity, shared emotions, and lifestyle. It explores the Artists' House as an alternative space that contributes to the emergence, continuance, and coexistence of new ideas, norms and values"--