Título: | GRIEVANCES, HOPES, AND REVOLUTION: THE AFFECTIVE POLITICS OF ANTICOLONIAL NATIONALISM IN IRAN | ||||||||||||
Autor: |
MATEUS SCHNEIDER BORGES |
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Colaborador(es): |
PAULA ORRICO SANDRIN - Orientador ALINA SAJED - Coorientador |
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Catalogação: | 18/MAI/2023 | Língua(s): | ENGLISH - UNITED STATES |
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Tipo: | TEXT | Subtipo: | THESIS | ||||||||||
Notas: |
[pt] Todos os dados constantes dos documentos são de inteira responsabilidade de seus autores. Os dados utilizados nas descrições dos documentos estão em conformidade com os sistemas da administração da PUC-Rio. [en] All data contained in the documents are the sole responsibility of the authors. The data used in the descriptions of the documents are in conformity with the systems of the administration of PUC-Rio. |
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Referência(s): |
[pt] https://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/projetosEspeciais/ETDs/consultas/conteudo.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=62557&idi=1 [en] https://www.maxwell.vrac.puc-rio.br/projetosEspeciais/ETDs/consultas/conteudo.php?strSecao=resultado&nrSeq=62557&idi=2 |
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DOI: | https://doi.org/10.17771/PUCRio.acad.62557 | ||||||||||||
Resumo: | |||||||||||||
What accounts for the persistence of the nation as a central object of
identification in Iran during the 1960s and 1970s? How can we understand the
appeal and pervasiveness of nationalism when it simultaneously could signify one
path to and a pitfall of decolonization, as Fanon warned? This thesis addresses some
of these questions in relation to anticolonial nationalism in Iran, its political
possibilities, decolonial fantasies, and desires. I discuss how three figures
articulated discourses of national liberation which mobilized different attachments
to the nation in pre-1979 Iran, attempting to understand what these affective
relations with nationalism provided as political imaginary and subjectivity.
Through a psychoanalytical framework rested on the theories of Jacques Lacan and
Frantz Fanon, I analyze the writings of Jalal Al-e Ahmad, Ali Shariati, and Forugh
Farrokhzad to grasp the rhythms and textures of enjoyment those imaginaries
assumed while being discursively constituted around specific signifiers and
identifications, such as nationalism, Third Worldism, and Islam. This thesis relies
on emotional discourse analysis to assess the meanings Iranian national
consciousness evoked in the form of desires and fantasies of liberation and
decolonization. Thus, I also aim to acknowledge and discuss the transnational
entanglements and symbolic connections some of these Iranian figures articulated
within the Third World, positioning them in an infrastructure of anticolonial
connectivity and showing how they are in debt to the theory and praxis of other
movements, intellectuals, and struggles.
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