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Persian Carpets: The Nation as a Transnational Commodity [Mīkstie vāki]

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Persian Carpets: the Nation As a Transnational Commodity tracks the Persian carpet as an exotic and mythological object, as a commodity, and as an image from mid-nineteenth-century England to contemporary Iran and the Iranian diaspora. Following the journey of this single object, the book brings issues of labor into conversation with the politics of aesthetics. It focuses on the carpet as a commodity which crosses the boundaries of private and public, religious and secular, culture and economy, modern and traditional, home and diaspora, and art and commodity to tell the story of transnational interconnectivity.

Bringing transnational feminist cultural studies, ethnography, and network studies within the same frame of reference, this book sheds light on Orientalia as civilizational objects that emerged as commodities in the encounter between the West and the many directly or indirectly colonized Middle Eastern and West Asian cultures, focusing on the specific example of Persian carpets as some of the most extensively valued and traded objects since colonial modernity.

Recenzijas

"Moallems astute analysis and the fascinating range of material with which she engages is indeed a creative and effective way to familiarize students with theoretical and methodological concepts in anthropology, cultural studies, political economy, and transnational feminist theory."

--Sima Shakhsari, Jadaliyya

Series Foreword viii
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(26)
1 Objects of Knowledge, Subjects of Consumption
27(19)
2 Transnational Orientalia and Civilizational Commodities
46(27)
3 The Spectacle of Labor
73(29)
4 Nation as Commodity
102(28)
5 Between Carpets and Computers
130(23)
Epilogue 153(2)
Index 155
Minoo Moallem is Professor of Gender and Womens Studies at the University of California at Berkeley.