January 16, 2009

Mummy dearest

My mother recently came to visit me in Iran, her first visit in 3 years. Making the thoroughly un-original observation that Tehran is both a huge building site and parking lot, she proceeded to take a zillion photos to prove this point. She is a keen photographer anyway, but somehow Iran made her even more snap-happy. Trekking around Tehran, she found even more subject matter- giggling school kids, nuts, street signs, gas pipes, supermarket shelves, cooked beetroot, her lunch... Tiring as it might have been, wandering around the city, waiting for her to get the perfect shot through a gap in the traffic, when we really did need to be somewhere, she did manage to take many good pics. It also provided another moment when I realised how much I had got used to this place, that with fresh eyes I might want to take similar photos, but that a lot of things had now blended into the background for me. With the new year upon us, and my mother no longer acting as my lens, I’ve resolved to take more pictures of my own. But for now, thanks to Khanoum Tiz-Bin for some of these:


Jolly school girls

Nuts etc, from the mirrored ceiling of a Khoshk Bar (dry goods) shop

Terrafik (traffic) and Borjha ( sky-scrapers) from Modarres Highway, North Tehran


Public Art? A sculpture outside Khane-ye Honarmandan (House of Artists)

A friend and I looking at second-hand watches, Jomeh Bazaar

Nose job? (apparently 1/3 women and 1/5 men in Iran have had them)

Young street-sellers, there are a lot of children and women involved in organised street trade, where little of the money gets back to them


An old chevrolet (can be seen cruising down Vali-e Asr)

Tehran as building site
(although economics has led to a slow-down in the besaz o befrush (build and sell) business)




















5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Nice Blog and very interesting. Pictures bring back fond memories of 2003 -2007. I lived and worked in Tehran and Mashhad. Set up the Wonderland Entertainment Centre's. Thanks for sharing :-) No need to publish this comment. Just a personal note. Dont come across any Brits here in UK who have ever been to Iran and as you know the place is grossly mis represented. :-) Rgds David

Nogheh Tizbeen said...

Khanum Tizbeen says that she probably deserves the sarcasm of kebabandtwoveg but also notes that the only photo she doesn't think is hers is the one from Modarres Highway. Correct?

It was the Barbie bag that made the jolly girls particularly interesting.

Otherwise, a sharp eye - and tongue - indeed.

Peace and love.

کرگدن‌ها ضد‌آفتاب نمی‌زنند said...

سلام
فارسی ت بد نیست و این تلاشی که می کنی که بهتر بشه واقعن قابل ستایشه. فکر می کنم یکی از مشکلاتت این باشه که انگلیسی فکر می کنی و بعد ترجمه ش می کنی به فارسی.
مثلن هیچ کی این جا نمی گه: نقشه ی تئاتری داری برام. ساختار این جمله انگلیسیه.
به هر حال بدو بیا ایران تئاتر هم می ریم

Anonymous said...

love it! selfishly wishing you were in the UK!
contact me when you come over and we can do an interview?
Fari

Anna Nikbakht Nooshin said...

Salam,

Salam,

I hope this email finds you well. I am a Persian student in my final
year completing my master's in Communication Science at the University
of Amsterdam. I am currently writing my master's thesis about Persian
bloggers living in and outside of Iran. I hope you don't mind me emailing you with
the following question:

I want to interview appr 10 Persian bloggers about their motivations to
blog about Iran, their lives and adventures. My thesis is about the
influence of weblogs on the communication of opinions of the younger
Persian generation.

My question to you is if you would be interested to be interviewd by me
for my thesis. Ofcourse, all of the participants will remain anonymous
and all of the questions are optional for you to answer. Also, if you
have any Persian friends who write a blog, could you perhaps forward
them this email so that they can also participate if interested.

I also want to tell you how much I admire all of your courage to keep a
blog about such a beautiful, but controversial country. I myself lived
in Iran for 8 years, so I know how hard it is sometimes to be heard.
That is why I want to write this thesis, so that I can give all the
unheard voices on these blogs a chance to be known.

Please let me know what your thoughts about my question are.

I hope that we can work together and I hope to hear from you.

All my best,
Anna Nikbakht Nooshin
Studentnumber: 0600369
e mail: A.Nikbakht@student.uva.nl