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Iranians in Texas : migration, politics, and ethnic identity PDF

212 Pages·2012·14.562 MB·English
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IRANIANS IN TEXAS MMOOBBAASSHHEERR__33550044__BBKK..iinnddbb ii 11//1100//1122 1111::0055 AAMM THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK IRANIANS IN TEXAS Migration, Politics, and Ethnic Identity Mohsen M. Mobasher University of Texas Press Austin MMOOBBAASSHHEERR__33550044__BBKK..iinnddbb iiiiii 11//1100//1122 1111::0055 AAMM Copyright © 2012 by the University of Texas Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America First edition, 2012 Requests for permission to reproduce material from this work should be sent to: Permissions University of Texas Press P.O. Box 7819 Austin, tx 78713-7819 www.utexas.edu/utpress/about/bpermission.html The paper used in this book meets the minimum requirements of ansi/niso z39.48-1992 (r1997) (Permanence of Paper). Designed by Ayham Ghraowi Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Mobasher, Mohsen M., 1962– Iranians in Texas : migration, politics, and ethnic identity / Mohsen M. Mobasher. — 1st ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-0-292-72859-2 (cloth : alk. paper) isbn 978-0-292-73708-2 (e-book) 1. Iranian Americans—Texas. 2. Iranians—Texas. 3. Immigrants—Texas. 4. Political refugees—Texas. 5. Iran—Politics and government—20th century. I. Title. f395.i5m63 2012 305.891'550764—dc23 2011031400 MMOOBBAASSHHEERR__33550044__BBKK..iinnddbb iivv 11//1100//1122 1111::0055 AAMM Dedicated to the loving memory of my father, Morteza, and my brother Majeed for their endless support; my dear mother, Fatemeh Tabatabaie, for enduring seven painful years of separation and for her relentless push for a reunion; my brother Mojtaba for his solitary fortitude in managing our family affairs in Iran; and my sister, Maryam, for her infi nite love and effort in reconstructing our family in exile. MMOOBBAASSHHEERR__33550044__BBKK..iinnddbb vv 11//1100//1122 1111::0055 AAMM THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK Contents Preface ix Acknowledgments xv Introduction 1 1. The Paradox of Migration 22 Neither Happy in Exile nor Looking Forward to Returning Home 2. To Be or Not to Be an Iranian 48 Politics, Media, and the Paradox of National Identity 3. Double Ambivalence and Double Detachment 69 The Paradox of Living in the United States 4. To Be an Iranian, American, or Iranian American 94 Family, Cultural Resistance, and the Paradox of Ethnic Identity among Second-Generation Iranian Americans 5. Exile and the Paradox of Gender, Marriage, and Family 134 Conclusion 157 Appendix. Research Methodology 163 Notes 171 Bibliography 181 Index 189 MMOOBBAASSHHEERR__33550044__BBKK..iinnddbb vviiii 11//1100//1122 1111::0055 AAMM THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK Preface In 1978–1979, millions of Iranian men and women from all social back- grounds marched through the streets of Tehran to end the fi fty-year reign of the Pahlavi dynasty. During and after the 1978–1979 revolutionary up- heavals, for various political and social reasons a great number of individu- als and families from diverse socioeconomic and religious backgrounds left Iran and settled mainly in Europe, Canada, and the United States. This book presents the experience of Iranian immigrants in the United States since the Iranian revolution in the context of the ongoing political tension between Iran and the United States precipitated by the Iranian government’s taking of fi fty-two Americans as hostages for 444 days in 1979. I chose the Iranian revolution and the hostage crisis as my point of departure for three reasons. First, with the exception of a massive migra- tion of a large number of Iranians to India in the seventh century (Ansari 1992), the revolution of 1978–1979 was the only time in Iranian history to witness an enormous number of people uprooted and forced to live in exile. Second, the Iranian revolution and the U.S.-Iranian hostility gener- ated by the hostage crisis has not only shaped the ebb and fl ow of Iranians’ immigration to the United States during the past thirty years but also in- fl uenced the attitudes of Iranian expatriates toward the United States and their relations with American people. Finally, the Iranian revolution and hostage crisis marked a radical negative shift in American public opinion toward Iran, Iranians, and Muslims. MMOOBBAASSHHEERR__33550044__BBKK..iinnddbb iixx 11//1100//1122 1111::0055 AAMM

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