"The Stuff That Dream Are Made Of" and "Death of a Mannequin"
The Stuff That Dreams
Are Made Of
Before
anything else, I just have to say – wow. Azar Nafisi is one hell of an
inspirational writer. She starts off talking about her sense of home. That Iran
had always been the home that she wanted to go back to when she was studying
abroad and that classic novels and poetry became a sort of home for her. Then
she tells us that she finally did go home to Iran only to find that it was not
the home she remembered. She arrived to witness the stripping of rights and
freedom, of creativity and imagination. Lastly, Nafisi challenges her readers
to ponder our own humanity.
Her words
are eloquent and impactful. They’re the type of words you’d expect to hear from
a great leader. She started slow and worked her way up to a profound ending. I
didn’t expect the beginning, where Nafisi describes herself as a spoiled brat
running around an airport, to lead to her plea for the return of humaneness in
our world. How she goes about this evolution is interesting. First, using
“home” as a running theme to carry her story into the deterioration of the Iran
she knows, then using the words of Huckleberry
Fin and the sayings of important writers to support her claims of the
importance of imagination to our humanity.
Death of a Mannequin
In this
piece, Mehrangiz Kar uses mannequins as a metaphor for femininity. She details
the sequence of changes that occur in the mannequins’ appearances in parallel
to the changes enforced on the female population of Iran during the revolution.
Kar states, “the mannequins and the alterations in their appearance became my
passion during the vety hard and lonely years of the revolution. I felt united
with these dolls. The mannequins somehow accurately reflected the systematic
aggression against our individual identities”(pg. 31).
It started
with the mannequins needing longer skirts. Then, they were required to wear a
veil. The control and repression of the mannequins’ appearances progressed
until they “were left with only a round face made out of cardboard. They had no
eyes, no eyebrows, no noses, no mouths. The ideal woman for a fundamentalist
was a woman who did not have eyes to see, a tongue to speak, and legs to run
away”(pg. 35). The mutilation and hopelessness of the mannequins mirrors the oppression
of Iranian women and is strongly felt by the reader.
-Erin
Hey Erin,
ReplyDeleteYou point to the line "I felt united with these dolls." I found it interesting that mannequins, of all things, become a rallying point for the narrator for ending oppression against Iranian women. I always have thought of mannequins (at least the more human-like ones) as representing the idealized female standard of beauty as well as a lack of identity and individuality--basically the objectification of women. I think the metaphor worked well-enough in the story, but more importantly left me wondering if we really want to go back to the sexy pre-revolution mannequin. Maybe something better will emerge out of current resistance.
Hi Erin! I'm thinking about your comment: "The mutilation and hopelessness of the mannequins mirrors the oppression of Iranian women and is strongly felt by the reader." There is definitely a powerful relationship between drawn between the mannequins and Iranian women, but I'm not sure I agree that it is a mirror. Or at least, not that the women are hopeless in the ways that the mannequins seem to be. It's almost like Kar is saying that she -- and perhaps other women -- needed to see oppression playing out against something non-human to understand the severity of what was being - at times gradually and at times suddenly - done to them. I don't know! The relationship she's positing is really complex! I'm not even sure I fully understand it.
ReplyDeleteYess! Okay I have to share the WOW moment of Azar Nafisi; I agree, very inspirational writing. I also liked your thoughts on what home was like before and after Nafisi went back to Iran and her writing on the differences she experienced. It seemed she had a real focus on imagination and a return to home, both which worked as successful through-lines of her piece!
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