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Patriotism as Oppositional Discourse: A Qasida by Mehdi Akhavan-Saless
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
Extract
The Qasida that follows provides an easy and obvious example of how topical literature can assume a specific political relevance within a specific social context. Written and first published in 1983, the poem was immediately seized upon as containing the poet's opposition to the ruling revolutionary state. This node between patriotism and political dissent was made possible only in the context of certain pronouncements by the leaders of Iran's revolution interpreted largely as their disregard for the country of Iran in an overzealous pursuit of the Islamic component in Iranian identity. Ever since his response to a question put to him on the plane that brought him back to Iran, the Ayatollah Khomeini was widely believed to feel no great affection for the country he was about to rule. Asked what he was feeling as he was returning to his homeland after fourteen years of exile, the Ayatollah had dismissed the question by saying, “Nothing!”
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Iranian Studies , Volume 30 , Issue 3-4: Selections from the Literature of Iran, 1977-1997 , Summer Fall 1997 , pp. 243 - 247
- Copyright
- Copyright © Association For Iranian Studies, Inc 1997
References
1. Qasida is an important genre in Persian poetry, both classical and modem. For a discussion of the genre and a more detailed analysis of Akhavan's qasida, see Karimi-Hakkak, Ahmad, “Preservation and Presentation: Continuity and Creativity in the Contemporary Persian Qasida,” in Qasida Poetry in Islamic Asia and Africa: Classical Traditions and Modern Meanings, (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1996), 253–280Google Scholar.
2. See Akhavan-Saless, Mehdi, To m ay kohan bum-o-bar dust daram (I Love You, Ancient Homeland), (Tehran: Morvarid Publishers, 1998), 229–230Google Scholar.
3. For an overview of Mehdi Akhavan-Saless's life and works, see Karimi-Hakkak, Ahmad, “Poet of Desires Turned to Dust: In Memoriam Mehdi Akhavan-Saless,” World Literature Today 66, no. 1 (Winter 1991): 18–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar.